May Day Can’t Stop EUR Rally

 | May 01, 2015 07:34AM ET

  • EUR prints a two-month high
  • German Bund yield correction continues
  • U.S ISM manufacturing PMI could cause problems in thin conditions
  • U.K manufacturing PMI hurts sterling’s expectations
  • This time last year the euro was trying desperately to drop through its one-month low of €1.3800. A year on, the single unit is again making some significant strides, albeit from much different price levels.

    The EUR has started the month of May climbing to a new two-month high against the dollar Friday (€1.1258), extending its recent rebound outright in quiet European holiday trade.

    The ECB’s €60b a month bond buying stimulus program managed to push the common currency down below the psychological €1.05 handle only six-weeks ago. With the market so bullish on the Fed timing of their first rate hike; many investors had expected that it was only a matter of time that the EUR would be trading at parity.

    The Euro/U.S rate divergence argument (a hawkish Fed and a dovish ECB) has seen investors plough into the short EUR, long USD positions for months. So much so, that +78% of all forex long dollar positions has been against the Euro. The one directional, lopsided trade was always going to be in danger if any of the parameters suddenly changed.