The euro has been on a tear lately, being at a 33-month high against the greenback. Heightened speculation over the European Central Bank’s (ECB) possible announcement of the QE wind down as soon as in October was behind this strength (read: ECB to Wind Up QE Soon? ETFs in Focus).
The ECB held interest rates steady and expects rates to “remain at their present levels for an extended period of time.” Though the ECB agreed in its latest meeting on Sep 7 that the latest euro rally could mar the recovery in the inflationary backdrop, he did not talk about any way to deal with the issue. Several market watchers, including the chief European economist at Morgan Stanley, believe that “October is probably a sweet spot for [the ECB] to announce tapering.”
This caused the euro to gain further. CurrencyShares Euro ETF (FXE – Free Report) was up about 0.9% on Sep 7. Meanwhile, the dollar plunged fell about 0.7% on the day as hurricanes and Trump’s policy uncertainty have taken center stage. Also, several downbeat economic data points including weak inflation weighed on the dollar.
Notably, the U.S. economy created 156,000 jobs in August, falling shy of economists’ expectation of 180,000 job additions. Not only was August job data less than expected, job totals also were reduced from 231,000 to 210,000 for June and 209,000 to 189,000 for July, as per an article published on180,000 (read: Defensive ETFs to Tackle Weak Job Data, North Korea Tensions).
The ECB is currently buying bonds worth 60 billion euros a month and plans to run the program to December 2017, or beyond, should there be any necessity (read: ECB Trims But Extends QE: ETF Winners & Losers).
Reasons Behind Euro’s Strength
The Euro shot up above $1.20 last month for the first time since the ECB announced the launch of QE two and a half years ago. FXE is up 13.6% this year while Powershares DB US Dollar Index Bullish Fund (UUP) is down 10.2%.
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