EUR/USD Flat Around 1.1650 As Hot U.S. PPI, Geopolitics Freeze Trade

Bank Note, Euro, Bills, Paper Money

Image Source: Pixabay


EUR/USD consolidates on Wednesday, hoovers around the 1.1645, unchanged amid a risk-off mood sponsored by geopolitical risks, which kept traders on the sidelines. A scarce economic docket in the Eurozone, but a busy one in the US, revealed that factories input prices had risen and weighed on traders’ bets for a Fed rate cut in January.


Euro consolidates as firmer US data fails to boost the Greenback

Tensions in the Middle East kept most G10 currencies within familiar levels, except for the Japanese Yen, which was underpinned by verbal intervention of Japanese authorities. Wall Street shows signs of rotation, with the two largest US equity indices printing losses, while the Dow Jones was unchanged and the Russell 2000 rose 0.7%.

Data from the US revealed that the Producer Price Index (PPI) came hot in November, hitting the 3% threshold in headline and underlying figures on an annual basis. Retail Sales revealed that American consumers remain resilient driving the US economy higher, while the latest update of the Atlanta GDP Now model, shows that the estimate for Q4 2025 is 5.3%, up from 5.1%.

In the meantime, Federal Reserve officials were busy during the day. Regional Bank Presidents Bostic, Kashkari —twice, Paulson, Goolsbee and Governor Miran crossed the wires, yet provided no novelty regarding their previous policy stance.

In Europe, the docket was empty, yet lawmakers in the European Union are deciding whether to postpone a vote to lift tariffs on US industrial goods to leverage themselves against Greenland takeover by the Trump administration. In addition to this, the French budget is pending for approval, yet it could pass without parliamentary approval, according to Politico citing sources.


What’s in the calendar for January 15?

The docket in the Eurozone will feature inflation for December in France and Spain, and Industrial Production figures for the bloc. In the US, traders focus will be on Initial Jobless Claims, the NY and Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Indices for January, and speeches by Fed officials.


Daily digest market movers: Euro remains flat for two straight days

  • The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the American’s currency value against a basket of other six, is down 0.14% at 99.05.
  • The US Bureau of Labor Statistics revealed that November’s PPI rose by 3% exceeding forecasts of 2.7% and October’s 2.8% reading. Excluding food and energy, the so-called core PPI increased by 3% as well, above forecasts of 2.7% and the previous reading —October, of 2.9%.
  • US Retail Sales rebounded strongly in November, rising 0.6% month-on-month after October’s 0.1% contraction, and topping market expectations of 0.4%. Control Group Retail Sales—used by the Census Bureau in the calculation of GDP—increased 0.4%, in line with forecasts, though easing from a downwardly revised 0.6% gain in the prior month.
  • Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic struck a hawkish tone, warning that inflation remains well above desired levels and arguing that monetary policy must stay restrictive for now. Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said the Fed must continue to balance both sides of its mandate, noting that the economy has not slowed as much as anticipated. He pointed to solid growth, a stabilizing labor market, and easing inflation.
  • Fed Governor Stephen Miran reiterated his strongly dovish stance, calling for as many as 150 basis points of rate cuts this year. Echoing that view, Anna Paulson said inflation could reach the Fed’s 2% target by year-end, adding that current policy is only slightly restrictive.
  • Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee emphasized that central bank independence remains essential to maintaining price stability.
  • Money market had trimmed the odds for a 25-basis point rate cut by the Fed, revealed the Interest Rate Probability tool by Prime Market Terminal. Traders see the Fed funds rate finishing at 3.20% so far, implying 55 basis points of cuts.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Source: Prime Market Terminal


Technical outlook: EUR/USD hovers around 1.1650 amid the lack of catalysts

EUR/USD trades sideways, unable to crack the 1.1700 figure on the upside, and 1.1650 on the downside. Nevertheless, momentum remains bearish as depicted by the Relative Strength Index (RSI), with the index remaining below its neutral level.

If the Euro clears 1.1700 it opens the door to test the 20-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at 1.1716, followed by 1.1750. Once surpassed, up next lies 1.1800. Conversely if the pair slumps below 1.1600, the first support would be the 200-day SMA at 1.1579. Once breached, the next key support is 1.1500 and the August 1 low of 1.1391.

(Click on image to enlarge)

EUR/USD daily chart


More By This Author:

GBP/USD Rallies As Fed Independence Threats Hammer Dollar
EUR/USD Slips Below 1.1650 As Resilient Us Labor Data Backs Dollar
Gold Slips Below $4,600 As Us Cpi Cools, U.S. Dollar Caps Gains
How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.