EUR/USD is mildly supported, mainly due to expected US Dollar weakness rather than Euro strength. The Euro is not presented as strongly undervalued, and the European Central Bank is described as cautious even with Germany using an expansionary fiscal stance.
The Federal Reserve is described as sounding firmer than markets expect. A delayed and shallower US easing cycle is described as a factor that may cap further EUR/USD gains.
Central Bank Divergence Limits Upside
The Euro is described as benefiting as the main anti-Dollar when the US Dollar risk premium rose amid erratic US policymaking. This is stated to have briefly pushed EUR/USD above 1.20 in January.
Further upside is described as limited compared with currencies such as JPY or CNY, which are presented as having clearer undervaluation arguments. Germany’s fiscal approach is described as supporting more stable Eurozone growth into 2026.
We see the upside for EUR/USD as constrained in the coming weeks due to the diverging paths of central banks. The Federal Reserve is signaling a more patient approach to easing than markets anticipate. This policy mix should limit significant gains for the currency pair.
Recent data from the United States supports this firmer stance, with the January 2026 core PCE inflation holding at 2.9% and the latest jobs report showing a resilient labor market. These figures reduce the urgency for the Fed to begin a deep cutting cycle. This strengthens the dollar’s relative appeal.
Potential Approaches For Derivative Traders
In contrast, the Eurozone’s inflation continues to moderate, with the latest Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) cooling to 2.1%. This gives the European Central Bank more room to consider easing policy sooner than its US counterpart. A cautious tone from ECB officials reinforces the view that the euro lacks its own strong drivers for appreciation.
We remember how erratic US policymaking pushed the pair briefly above 1.20 back in January of 2025, driven by a higher risk premium on the dollar. However, that was a unique situation, and the euro currently lacks a strong undervaluation argument to repeat such a move. Germany’s stable fiscal policy provides a floor but is unlikely to fuel a major rally on its own.
For derivative traders, this suggests that selling out-of-the-money call options on EUR/USD rallies could be a viable strategy to collect premium. Establishing bearish positions, such as buying puts or implementing put spreads, may also be considered to hedge against or profit from potential downside. The environment appears less favorable for strategies that rely on a strong, sustained upward trend.