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EUR/USD Forecast:Euro Continues to See Questions Asked of It

By Christopher Lewis
Senior Technical Analyst

Christopher Lewis is a technical analyst and market commentator at DailyForex with more than two decades of trading experience in Forex and other leveraged markets. Based in Columbus, Ohio, he specializes in chart-based analysis of major currency pairs, stock indices, commodities, and energy markets, focusing on clear support and resistance levels, trend structure, and risk management. Christopher produces daily written and video analysis for tra...

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The Euro is currently having issues trying to make a determined move, but seems to be a bit weak at the moment.

EURUSD

The Euro is currently navigating a policy divergence type of landscape while the US dollar remains resilient due to US labor market stabilizing. The European Central Bank is providing an unexpected tailwind. Unlike the Fed, which now markets price in 3 rate cuts in 2026 starting in maybe May or June, the ECB is signaling that they are going to hold for the remainder of the year.

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This relative hawkishness coming out of Frankfurt, combined with Eurozone current account surpluses, is keeping the well supported pair above the 1.18 level for the time being. That being said, there are a lot of questions to ask about where we go from here, and you should continue to look at this as a pair that might be positive over the longer term, but it is going to be a grind.

I am not looking for big numbers here. If we break down below the 50-day EMA, I start to buy the US dollar, not necessarily here, but in other pairs. I think it would really clean up against some of the laggards out there as far as economics are concerned, such as Switzerland, Canada, or the Japanese Yen.

Technical Outlook and Potential Targets

If we do break down from here below the 50-day EMA, we could test the 200-day EMA, which is closer to the 1.1565 level. Rallying from here makes a bit of sense, but again, this is a neutral to slightly bullish scenario. When I say slightly, I am probably thinking about a 60% bullish 40% bearish scenario.

This is a market that will be very slow and deliberate but buying dips should work for the short term. I am not looking for big moves. The entire move that I think is possible at this point is 1.23, which could take months. That could be a middle of the summer thing once the Federal Reserve really starts to give the market what it wants as far as rate cuts.

If we continue to see labor and inflation in the United States support the idea of the Federal Reserve holding still, that could cause some downward pressure.

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Senior Technical Analyst
Christopher Lewis is a technical analyst and market commentator at DailyForex with more than two decades of trading experience in Forex and other leveraged markets. Based in Columbus, Ohio, he specializes in chart-based analysis of major currency pairs, stock indices, commodities, and energy markets, focusing on clear support and resistance levels, trend structure, and risk management. Christopher produces daily written and video analysis for traders who rely on technical setups to navigate volatile market conditions

As seen on: Pairs Of Aces Podcast,The Trader Guy, FXEmpire

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