EUR/USD Weekly Forecast: Looming ECB rate cut, US employment data hint at volatile week
The European Central Bank will meet on Thursday, and rate cuts are priced in.The focus in the United States will be on employment data ahead of the Nonfarm Payrolls report.The EUR/USD pair\'s long-term perspective turned neutral after spending three weeks below 1.0900.The EUR/USD pair spent most of the week within familiar levels, partially due to the lack of relevant macroeconomic data throughout the first half of the week and partly amid comments from different Federal Reserve (Fed) officials. American policymakers kept putting efforts into cooling down hopes for interest rate cuts, keeping markets in risk-averse mode. Across the pond, European Central Bank (ECB) representatives maintained their willingness to trim interest rates in June, but warned a July cut is far from granted.But financial markets got some interesting clues beyond central banks’ well-known messages. The focus was on inflation-related figures, which helped EUR/USD to near the 1.0900 threshold by the end of the week.Inflation supporting central banks’ stancesGermany reported that the Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) rose 0.2% MoM, meeting expectations, while the annual HICP increased 2.8%, accelerating from the previous 2.4% and above the market’s estimate of 2.7%. Also, the Eurozone HICP rose more than anticipated in May, as the annual figure resulted at 2.6%, higher than the previous 2.4%.Finally on Friday, the United States (US) unveiled the April Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index. Most readings matched previous readings and forecasts, with annual inflation holding steady at 2.7%. On a positive note, the Bureau of Economic Analysis reported monthly inflation was up 0.3%, as expected, but the core reading was slightly below expected.US April PCE inflation brought modest relief to financial markets, but make no mistake. Such numbers fall way short of twisting Fed officials’ hands. A rate cut in the United States before September is still out
of the table.European Central Bank rate cut comingThings can turn more interesting next week as the June ECB meeting arrives: The central bank will announce its decision on Thursday, and markets are eagerly awaiting confirmation of the monetary policy loosening process. The Governing Council is expected to cut 25 basis points (bps) for every one of the main refinancing operations, the deposit facility and the marginal lending facility. The latest Eurozone inflation figures support the case. It is worth adding the decision has been long ago priced in, but that does not mean financial markets
won’t react to the announcement.The rate cut itself could send the Euro roughly 100 pips down against the US Dollar as an initial reaction. The following movements will depend on ECB President Christine Lagarde\'s words and policymakers\' views, as reflected by the accompanying statement. Whatever they anticipate for the future, or not, could determine the Euro’s trend for the next week. The Fed, however, will meet just one week later, on June 12, which means speculative interest will quickly move into building expectations for such even after the ECB’s decision is made.Busy United States docketMeanwhile, the US calendar will be flooded with employment-related figures. The country will release the April JOLTS Jobs Openings report on Tuesday, the May ADP survey on private job creation on Wednesday and Challenger Job Cuts alongside weekly unemployment figures on Thursday. All the readings come as an anticipation of the Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report to be out on Friday. The Unemployment Rate stood at 3.9% in April, and market players will be looking for signs of a loosening labor market.Other than that, the US will release the ISM Manufacturing PMI on Monday and the ISM Services PMI on Wednesday.EUR/USD technical outlookThe EUR/USD pair has been trading below 1.0900 for a third consecutive week, confined to a quite limited range. The pair has remained below the level since mid-March, establishing a 2024 low at 1.0600 in April. The recovery from the latter has been tepid and painful ahead of June central banks’ announcements.As a result, the weekly chart offers a neutral stance. EUR/USD keeps hovering around a flat 20 Simple Moving Average (SMA), currently at around 1.0810. At the same time, the pair is midway between flat 100 and 200 SMAs, with the shorter one providing dynamic support at around 1.0640. Technical indicators, in the meantime, head nowhere around their midlines, reflecting the absence of directional momentum.The EUR/USD pair’s daily chart shows that it met buyers at around 1.0782, the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the latest bullish run measured between 1.0600 and 1.0894. Overall, the pair is bullish, as it is developing above all its moving averages, with the 20 SMA maintaining its bullish slope after crossing above the longer ones, which anyway remain directionless. Finally, technical indicators have bounced from aroun
