A falling euro is not the ECB’s biggest headache (2024)

A falling euro is not the ECB’s biggest headache (1)

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Fears of reflation The factors that could push EUR/USD to parity How likely is parity? Weaker euro adds to inflation concerns But the ECB has even bigger concerns

Everything looked so easy for the ECB. Last week’s meeting had not only opened the door widely to a June rate cut but upcoming data releases with some softening of wage growth and inflation would allow the ECB to walk through that door. The ECB’s own inflation forecasts had now been solidly at 2% and below for the second half of 2025 and beyond and actual inflation has come down faster than expected. Instead of a difficult last mile, many ECB officials had started to become more concerned about a potential undershooting of inflation in case rates were not cut. Developments over the last week, however, are likely to make some ECB hawks rethink the June rate-cut option.

Fears of reflation

It started with US inflation last week, which came in higher than expected and showed signs of reflation. While we have often heard the story of two different tales and economic divergence between the US and the eurozone, the reality is that US headline inflation has simply led its eurozone counterpart by half a year since the pandemic. Common global shocks and similar domestic supply-side constraints explain the inflation similarities, despite rather diverging economic growth stories. But there is more to new ECB concerns than US inflation: the weakening of the euro and the surge in oil prices.

The factors that could push EUR/USD to parity

The euro has dropped some 4percent against the US dollar since the start of the year. Since last week’s ECB meeting, EUR/USD has declined from 1.08 EUR/USD to 1.06, and there is now increasing discussion in markets on whether it can keep falling to (or close to) parity. Anticipated growing interest rate divergence is the main driver behind the recent weakening, although increasing geopolitical turmoil in the Middle East and higher oil prices are also adding to the bearish momentum for the euro.

To estimate the chances of EUR/USD hitting parity, we must look back at when this last happened, in the third quarter of 2022. Back then, there were two major drivers of the pair: rate differentials and energy prices. The EUR/USD two-year swap rate differential was wider in favour of the dollar compared to now, although not by a big margin: around -175bp versus the current -160bp. When we look only at short-term rate differentials, EUR/USD has more room to fall from current levels.

The energy factor is, however, no longer weighing on the euro. Back in 2022, record-high energy prices and uncertainty regarding energy supply had radical implications for the economic fundamentals of the common currency, as the eurozone’s terms of trade collapse meant the medium-term real fair value of the euro was also markedly lower. Despite the current geopolitical turmoil, energy prices are very low compared to the 2022 peaks –at least for the time being (see more on this below).

In a way, global equity performance has replaced the energy crisis as a EUR/USD short-term driver, and stock markets’ resilience has kept the pair afloat for longer than rates implied. However, in the medium run, the terms of trade and other economic fundamentals are statistically what determines EUR/USD moves. Since those fundamentals are stronger for the euro now compared to 2022, a move to parity would be less sustainable this time.

The euro's fundamentals are stronger than in 2022

A falling euro is not the ECB’s biggest headache (2)

ING, Macrobond

How likely is parity?

So, what would it take to bring EUR/USD back to parity? Further divergence in the Fed-ECB policy can be enough, in our view, but we may well need to see the 2-year EUR/USD swap rate widening to more than the -175bp bottom, as the euro is no longer facing the kind of fundamental pressure on its longer-term fair value caused by the energy crisis. We suspect markets would need to erase all Fed easing bets for this year while maintaining those for the ECB within 75bp and 100bp to drive EUR/USD close to 1.00. This is not unthinkable considering the exceptional strength in US data and continued repricing higher in Fed rate expectations.

Our core view remains that the Fed will cut rates at one point this year as the US consumer story ultimately softens and inflation reverts to a more stable downward trend. In line with our call for 75bp of easing by the Fed in 2024, we see EUR/USD as more likely to trade in the upper-half of the 1.05/1.10 range rather than in the lower-half of 1.00/1.05 (more in our latest FX Talking).

Still, we admit that the risks to our FX call – and therefore the chances of EUR/USD approaching parity – are not limited to the Fed/ECB call. The euro remains highly exposed to geopolitical tensions both in the Middle East and in Ukraine. The eurozone and the US stand at the opposite ends of energy independence, so higher oil prices would add pressure to the pair. Any hit to global equities would have a similar effect, as discussed above, and we estimate a potential re-election of Donald Trump in November would be markedly dollar-positive and euro-negative.

As of now, with EUR/USD trading at 1.0620, the option market prices in an 18% probability of the pair hitting 1.00 in six months, against a 53% chance of hitting 1.10 (chart below).

Option-implied probability of different EUR/USD scenarios

A falling euro is not the ECB’s biggest headache (3)

ING, Refinitiv

Weaker euro adds to inflation concerns

The recent weakening of the euro exchange rate brings back the old questions of how the ECB will react to exchange rate movements. The short answer is ‘it depends’. The longer answer is ‘it also depends, but most importantly, watch the trade-weighted exchange rate and not a bilateral exchange rate’.

Let’s be more precise: there is nothing like a pain threshold for the ECB, neither in times of euro strength nor in times of euro weakness. The ECB doesn’t have an exchange rate target but takes exchange rate movements into account as part of the transmission channels of monetary policy. Looking at the nominal effective exchange rate actually shows a strengthening since the ECB’s March meeting but weakened in line with the euro-dollar pair by around 1% since last week.

In the BIS EUR broad effective exchange rate (chart below), the USD has a 14% weight: roughly as much as GBP and CHF combined and less than the CNY weight (19%). The euro effective rate was lower in 2020, when EUR/USD was close to 1.10, than in 2022, when EUR/USD touched 0.96 lows.

The euro isn't that weak on a trade-weighted level

A falling euro is not the ECB’s biggest headache (4)

ECB, BIS, ING

Comparing current exchange rate developments with the technical assumptions in the ECB’s March projections still shows little reasonto be concerned. Applying today’s exchange rates would hardly push up the ECB’s inflation forecasts. However, the euro dropping to parity before the ECB’s June meeting and the trade-weighted exchange rate also losing further groundcould push up the ECB’s inflation projections by roughly 0.1 percentage point this year and 0.3 to 0.4 percentage points in 2025 and 2026.

But, even here, it depends. In 2020, the ECB concluded that “the impact of exchange rates on inflation declines along the pricing chain”, suggesting that the ECB could have a somewhat higher tolerance for a weaker euro as long as core inflation and wage pressures remain muted.

But the ECB has even bigger concerns

For the time being, the weaker euro doesn’t look like the biggest concern for the ECB. It is rather the surge in oil prices and a potentially further escalation of the conflicts in the Middle East thatwill give at least the ECB hawks some headaches. At currently USD90/bbl, oil prices are already more than 10% above the levels used in the ECB’s March projections, potentially pushing up inflation forecasts by 0.1 to 0.2 percentage points in 2024 and 2025.

It's too early, yet, as the cut-off date for the important June projections is only four weeks away. However, the euro at parity and oil prices at USD100/bbl could suddenly turn a relatively benign inflation outlook into a much more alarming one in which inflation would reach the ECB’s target only at the very end of the forecast horizon.

We still see the ECB cutting rates at the June meeting. However, the combination of an even further weakening euro exchange rate, geopolitical tensions and surging energy prices could bring back inflation headaches and limit the ECB’s room for manoeuvre.

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Monetary Policy Inflation FX Eurozone ECB

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A falling euro is not the ECB’s biggest headache (2024)

FAQs

Why is the euro losing value against the dollar? ›

Euro Long. An exodus out of the common currency amid the energy-price shock following Russia's invasion of Ukraine saw it fall below parity with the dollar for most of the final months of 2022. Asset owners had shifted steadily back into euros over the last 18 months but their enthusiasm is waning.

Why is EUR/USD dropping? ›

EUR/USD outlook again hurt by weak manufacturing data as French election looms. Once again, the manufacturing sector of the Eurozone continues to disappoint expectations.

Is the euro increasing or decreasing? ›

The euro, serving as the official currency for 20 members of the European Union, has experienced a notable devaluation against the US dollar, declining approximately 2.2% since the start of 2024.

Is the euro expected to rise or fall in 2024? ›

Bank of America and ING

On the other hand, Bank of America (BoA) expects a still relatively strong euro in 2024. The exchange rate estimate is 1.10 and 1.15 in 2024. Several elements could alter these assumptions, but the main one is related to interest rates.

Where is the American dollar worth the most in 2024? ›

Japan continues to be a popular choice, but Vietnam and South Korea stand as solid alternatives among numerous countries in Asia with favourable exchange rates for the US dollar. Closely following in value are South American countries: Argentina and Chile are among those offering the biggest luxury bang.

Is the euro stronger than the U.S. dollar? ›

The euro shares the No. 8 spot among the world's strongest currencies, with 1 euro buying 1.08 dollars (or $1 equals 0.93 euro). The euro is the official currency of 20 out of the 27 countries that form the European Union.

How much is $100 US in euros? ›

US Dollars to Euros conversion rates
USDEUR
100 USD93.32 EUR
500 USD466.62 EUR
1,000 USD933.24 EUR
5,000 USD4,666.22 EUR
7 more rows

What will happen if the euro collapses? ›

A collapsed euro would likely compromise the Schengen Agreement, which allows free movement of people, goods, services, and capital. Each member country would need to reintroduce its national currency and the appropriate exchange rate for global trade.

What will happen to the US Dollar in 2024? ›

We expect 2024 to be a year of diverging trends for the dollar. It will likely move lower on a broad trade-weighted basis early in the year but stabilize as the year progresses. Although we expect a general downward drift for the dollar, performance of individual currencies will likely vary widely.

What is the forecast for the euro and US Dollar? ›

The Euro US Dollar Exchange Rate - EUR/USD is expected to trade at 1.08 by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate it to trade at 1.07 in 12 months time.

Will the euro get stronger against the dollar? ›

Major takeaways. In the medium term, most analysts expect the EURUSD to grow to 1.1449 by the end of 2025. The rate can reach 1.296 before 2027 if an optimistic scenario plays out. It's worth noting that the euro price may fall below $1 while correcting.

When was the last time the euro was weaker than the dollar? ›

In the summer of 2022, the dollar reached parity with the euro ($1 = one euro). For a brief time, less than $1 was required to purchase one euro. Prior to that time, this last time parity occurred was in late 2002. The Fed last increased rates (for the current cycle) in July 2023.

Is the European economy in trouble? ›

The eurozone economy shrank by 0.1 percent in both the third and fourth quarters of last year, a technical recession. Germany, which accounts for one-quarter of the bloc's economy, barely avoided a recession in the first quarter of 2024, growing 0.2 percent.

Is it cheaper to buy euros in the US or in Europe? ›

With time at your disposal, you'll be able to see exactly what the fee and rate is, and how many euros you'll get for your dollars. It's possible of course that you might get a better deal when you land in Europe. It may well be the case that fees are lower and exchange rates better.

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