The Euro Is In Ascendance, But Is It For Real This Time Around?

 | Jul 20, 2017 03:46AM ET

There was a time in the not too distant past that, if every indicator known to man was screaming to short the Euro, then be prepared to lose a fortune. No matter what the fundamentals or technicals were telegraphing, the Euro continued to be buffeted by unknown forces, even at the height of the crisis in Europe. The stories at the time spoke of Arab or Chinese monies coming to the fore or of central bankers determined to re-balance their reserve holdings to reflect less dependence on the almighty U.S. Dollar. Believe it or not, everyone is once again screaming to short the Euro? Any takers?

A brief history lesson is on order. The Euro was flying high in July of 2008, topping out at just above 1.60, but then a fall from grace became the order of the day. The Euro would fall precipitously. Analysts would shout that parity was a foregone conclusion, and then suddenly, like a Phoenix from the ashes, it would rise like a rocket for no known reason. This rollercoaster continued on until 2014. Many fund managers lost fortunes and their jobs in the process, but, once central bank policy divergence gripped the masses, the Euro was reminded that gravity truly does exist. In eight short months, the Euro fell from 1.40 to 1.05. The short trade had finally come to pass, and fortunes were made.

It finally found support at a bit below 1.05 in early 2015, but the damage had been done. From that point on, the combined currency has vacillated between 1.05 and 1.15, never quite having the energy of conviction to break through and go higher. But wait! Wherever the previous capital flows of yore had departed to, it seems that they re-emerged with a vengeance after champagne corks popped to start 2016. From 1.04, when parity was on everyone’s lips, the Euro turned north and shot forward. Forecasters for 2017 were pointing south of 1.00, but a few outliers believed that 1.10 was in the cards. It seems that all bets are off the table. The experts have erred once more. The Euro is above 1.15, as of today, and shows no signs of pulling back.

What is the Euro metaphor of today to be? We have used about every one there is. I mentioned the Phoenix above, but Icarus flying too high and Atlas shrugging from the weight upon his shoulders have been overused, as well. The “teeter-totter” in the above diagram will have to do for the moment, since it speaks to a balance, but a precarious one at that, with no indication of which side will gain the advantage. The “boo birds”, if you will, are still quite righteous with their overbearing arguments for parity before yearend, but there is a band of Euro supporters, who are ecstatic at the moment.

h3 What are the reasons for the Euro’s unexpected resurgence of late?/h3

Let’s take a look at one of the short-term annotated charts that is making the rounds:

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