EU Fundamentals Improve, EUR Should Follow

 | Mar 04, 2015 12:29PM ET

Cheaper oil, low interest rates and strong US growth may be starting to work their magic on the flagging Eurozone economy – if so a recovery of the EUR should follow in due course.

For now the EUR remains under pressure, not least with the European Central Bank launching its EUR 1.1 trillion quantitative easing programme (EUR 60 billion a month). If the US starts raising interest rates this year --- then EUR/USD at parity is still very likely, but it may not last long.

The early seeds of Eurozone recovery could be in the process of being sown. Q4, 2014 quarterly GDP was 0.3%, compared with 0.2% and 0.1% during the previous two quarters. Encouragingly this happened before the ECB even started its QE programme and the oil price only tanked in December.

And there are signs of improvement at the Eurozone's periphery too. During Q4, Spain's GDP rose 0.7% and Portugal's 0.5%. In fact only three Eurozone countries, which reported Q4 numbers, saw a contraction: Greece -0.2%, Cyprus -0.7% and Finland -0.3%. Germany, the motor of the Eurozone, grew 0.7%.

Meanwhile, M1 money supply (money in circulation and short-term deposits) rose 9% in January, it's fastest since 2011. Rising money supply is usually a sign of increasingly economic activity and can also point to higher inflation (though price pressures are still very subdued in the Eurozone).

EUR/USD likely to be still heading for parity, but may not stay there long