Euro Bears Under Pressure Despite Flash PMIs Seeing Red

 | Apr 23, 2015 07:27AM ET

Notwithstanding the lack of fundamental data on show this week, the EUR bear has been trying valiantly to build up a head of steam ahead of tomorrow’s important Eurogroup meeting in Riga, Latvia. With the market not yet privy to any new hard developments on the Greek creditor fiasco, the naysayers have been rather content to continue to short the EUR on rallies this week. For some time the EUR/USD has been trading directionless, confined to a jobbing range (€1.0650-€1.0750) post-April nonfarm payrolls.

Earlier this morning, the 19-member single currency looked to be on the verge of rolling over, breaking out of neutral territory on the back of weaker European flash purchasing managers’ index (PMI) data. With a Grexit a potential reality, combined with further weakness in the eurozone’s core, it would be considered a potent mix for the EUR bear. Ahead of European economic releases, the EUR had teased with stop-losses below €1.0660. Alas, the single unit has managed to provisionally survive the weaker flash data.

The unit has been dragged temporarily higher on favorable rhetoric from Eurogroup head Jeroen Dijsselbloem who said there was progress in the Greek talks, and by the European Central Bank’s (ECB) chief economist Peter Praet’s belief that the eurozone’s economy is getting back on the growth track. Investors should not be surprised that today’s price action could continue along the same vein during the North American session. The EUR bear needs a break of substance through €1.0660 (this week’s lows) to open up the door to last week’s €1.0624 region. Any loss of momentum for the EUR bear is likely to see the market return to the upper echelon of this week’s range, again waiting for any tidbits on Greece.