3 Reasons To Cautiously Buy Euros

 | Jun 01, 2016 04:57PM ET

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management.

The European Central Bank meets Thursday and the euro is trading strongly ahead of the monetary policy announcement. The sell-off in May took the currency pair from a high above 1.1600 to a low of 1.10975 with the decline in EUR/USD stopping right at the 200-day SMA.

h3 Given the steepness of euro's decline, there are 3 compelling reasons to buy euros
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1. ECB Could Upgrade its Growth Forecasts – On Wednesday morning the OECD raised its GDP forecasts for the Eurozone to 1.6% from 1.4% and, if a similar move is made by the European Central Bank Thursday, we could see new highs in the euro. No one expects the ECB to change monetary policy and with the TLTRO and corporate bond-buying program still in queue, the central bank will want to give current stimulus measures more time to work. We’ve also seen mixed performance in the Eurozone economy since the last meeting in April. Consumer spending in Germany and the Eurozone as a whole weakened, price pressures fell, economic activity in the Eurozone slowed according to the Composite PMI index and market measures declined. Yet we see German confidence on the rise, German manufacturing and service-sector activity accelerate and, most importantly, the German unemployment rate fell to its lowest level on record. Which tells us that the Eurozone’s largest economy is performing well enough for the central bank to consider raising its GDP forecast. Also, ECB President Draghi’s tone is always important and if we are wrong and the ECB lowers its GDP forecast with Draghi expressing renewed concern about the peripheral economy, EUR/USD will tank.


2. Seasonality – As we saw May, seasonality can have a significant impact on a currency. For the past 6 years, the EUR/USD lost value in May and 2016 was no exception. However taking a look at the table below, euro tends to have a positive seasonal bias in the month of June. We suspect that the rallies are mostly driven by short covering or profit taking, 2 factors that could very well affect EUR/USD this week if the ECB is less dovish or Friday’s U.S. labor-market report falls short of expectations.