The Eurozone HCOB Manufacturing PMI for January has been recorded at 49.4, surpassing expectations. This figure shows a slight improvement from the previous month, yet remains below the neutral 50 mark.
Although the PMI is still under 50, it hints at resilience within the manufacturing sector. This report may have a positive impact on market sentiments, particularly affecting the Euro’s exchange rate against the Dollar and other major currencies.
Historical Context
We recall this time last year, in January 2025, when the Eurozone manufacturing PMI print of 49.4 brought a brief moment of optimism. It suggested the sector was resilient, even though it was still in contraction territory. That reading helped support the Euro temporarily against the dollar.
Today’s flash manufacturing reading for January 2026 has painted a slightly weaker picture, coming in at 48.8. This contrasts with last year’s hope and is being driven by continued sluggishness in German industrial orders, which fell 1.2% in the last reported quarter. The market is now more concerned about the risk of a technical recession in the first half of this year.
This suggests potential weakness for the Euro, making put options on the EUR/USD an attractive hedge for the coming weeks. Traders could consider buying puts with a strike price around 1.0700 to protect against a slide. The cost of these options is still reasonable, as implied volatility has not spiked significantly yet.
Market Reactions and Strategies
Looking back at early 2025, we saw that low energy prices helped stabilize the manufacturing sector. This year, however, a recent uptick in natural gas futures to over €45 per MWh is squeezing margins and dampening the outlook. This makes short positions on European industrial sector futures a potential strategy to consider.
For those with exposure to European interest rates, this weak manufacturing data increases the probability of an earlier ECB rate cut. The market is already pricing in a 60% chance of a 25 basis point cut by June 2026. Positioning through derivatives like 3-month Euribor futures could capitalize on this expectation of lower rates ahead.