Euro recovers slightly

Published on 23.04.2024 12:56

EUR/USD recovers from earlier weakness after the release of lower-than-expected US PMI data brings into question US economic exceptionalism and weakens the US Dollar (USD) on Tuesday. The pair manages to undo the damage from earlier losses following the release of preliminary Eurozone Purchasing Manager Index (PMI) data for April.

EUR/USD recovers after US PMI data underwhelms

EUR/USD recovers into positive territory after the release of preliminary S&P Global PMI data for the United States shows readings that were lower than economists had forecast, weakening the US Dollar. The S&P Global Manufacturing PMI also fell into contraction territory after giving a reading of 49.9, which is below the 50 that distinguishes growth from contraction. The result was considerably lower than the 51.9 of March and the 52.0 forecast. The S&P Global Composite PMI came out at 50.9 from 52.1 previously.

The S&P Global Services PMI fell to 50.9 from 51.7 in March and below the 52.0 forecast. Services data is particularly important for the USD since the sector has been highlighted as especially responsible for the sticky inflation in the US. This has led many investors to speculate the Federal Reserve (Fed) will maintain interest rates at elevated levels longer than was expected at the start of the year. Higher interest rates are positive for a currency as they generate higher foreign capital inflows.

The lower-than-expected data, however, may recalibrate Fed interest rate expectations, leading to a revival of bets the Fed could start cutting interest rates in the near-term. After the release of the data, market gauges of the probability the Fed will cut interest rates indicated a first rate cut by September.

New Home Sales data for March, also out on Tuesday probably supported the Greenback after it came out higher than expectations, with an 8.8% rise against the negative 5.1% in February, and 0.693 million homes sold, versus the 0.668M expected and 0.637 previous figure.

EUR/USD declined earlier on Tuesday, after the release of the HCOB Manufacturing PMI missed estimates, falling to 45.6 in April versus the 46.5 expected and 46.1 of March.

HCOB Composite PMI for the Eurozone rose to 51.4, however, which was above the 50.8 forecast and the 50.3 in March. The gain was driven by the HCOB Services PMI which increased to 52.9 in April – higher than both the 51.8 forecast and the 51.5 previous.