Euro Woes Continue

 | Jul 30, 2014 03:21AM ET

The Euro has been stuck falling on the charts for sometime now, and there looks to be no avail for the currency, which has had its fair share of ups and downs in the most recent times. Many have long predicted that the currency was overvalued – especially against the US Dollar. And it would seem that now we are seeing a market correction in the face of serious action from the ECB in its effort to fight inflation.

Essentially, bad data is one key driver, but when looking at it from a fundamental level I think it’s very important to look at interest rates as well, as they act as a key driver when it comes to capital flows between various nations.

Presently the U.S (0.25%) and the UK (0.50%) are looking to raise the interest rates in their central banking systems, at the same time we have also seen other nations look at the options of lifting rates, with New Zealand currently the most aggressive of the major currencies to lift rates as it sits at 3.5%. Presently the Euro interest rate sits at 0.15%, which is a record low and gives little ability for monetary policy at that rate, but it’s currently required in order to help stoke inflation – as low interest rates lead to less people saving and more consuming, along with more business expenditure and investment.

Capital flows as a result tend to drift towards returns, and presently in the Euro-zone there is very little when it comes to fixed interest returns, so money is flowing out of the Euro-zone and into much more appealing investments for global markets.

So in the short to medium term the Euro is looking much, much weaker, and as a result, I would not be surprised to see much stronger falls on the charts.

But, when we look at the charts we can see that it defied fundamentals and rose for some time against the USD, and I believe this was in part to uncertainty in the U.S economy, which is now starting to subside as the economy picks up pace in the U.S and labour readings are much stronger (non-farm averaging 200k+). The U.S economy has a large impact, especially with its dollar. But what is key, is noting that Yellen has still been very dovish and there is no guarantee that the Euro as a result will shift lower.