EUR/USD Price Forecast: Eur Slides Toward 1.1850 as Strong Dollar and Weak Eurozone Data Collide

EUR/USD Price Forecast: Eur Slides Toward 1.1850 as Strong Dollar and Weak Eurozone Data Collide

With EUR/USD pinned under 1.1930, DXY near 96.97, US CPI at 2.4% and Eurozone industrial output down to 1.2%, the pair risks a break toward 1.1809 if 1.1840 gives way | That's TradingNEWS

TradingNEWS Archive 2/16/2026 12:09:00 PM
Forex EUR/USD EUR USD

EUR/USD Price Forecast – Range Trapped Between 1.1850 Support and 1.1930 Resistance

EUR/USD – Price Action Still Stuck Under 1.1900

EUR/USD spent the last sessions oscillating just below 1.1900, failing to build momentum either for a clean break higher toward 1.20 or a decisive flush toward 1.1800. One of the main intraday stories was the early push back above 1.1900 toward roughly 1.1920, which faded quickly once stronger-than-expected US labor data hit, sending the pair back below the figure and leaving it meandering in a tight band under 1.1900.
Intraday, price has been trading between the 100-hour and 200-hour moving averages, signalling a neutral near-term bias rather than a clear bullish or bearish trend. The 200-hour average, sitting near 1.1853, has acted as a reliable floor since last week and coincides with a cluster of large option expiries, turning that level into the first big line of defence for the bulls.

EUR/USD – Euro Side Dominated by Weak Industrial Output and Passive ECB

On the euro side, macro drivers are negative and mostly priced in, which is exactly the problem for EUR bulls: there is little fresh upside catalyst. Eurozone industrial production slowed sharply to 1.2% year-on-year, missing the 1.3% forecast and falling from 2.5% in November. That swing from 2.5% to 1.2% signals a clear loss of industrial momentum and, more importantly, a pullback in capital goods investment of about 2%, consistent with businesses delaying or cancelling long-term projects as uncertainty persists.
With growth indicators softening and no new hawkish signals from the ECB, the central bank remains firmly sidelined. Policymakers are already uncomfortable with EUR/USD trading close to 1.20, and that implicit discomfort caps the upside every time the pair approaches the upper end of the recent range. The result: euro fundamentals are acting as a drag rather than a tailwind, helping to keep rallies contained around 1.1920–1.1930.

EUR/USD – US Dollar Supported by DXY 96.97 and Cooling CPI at 2.4%

On the USD side, the narrative is more nuanced. The US Dollar Index sits around 96.97, up roughly 0.05%, even after a softer inflation report that, in theory, should have weighed on the currency. January CPI slowed to 2.4% year-on-year from 2.7% in December, while monthly price gains cooled to 0.2% versus expectations of 0.3%. That combination points toward inflation normalising, reinforcing the “soft landing” story and allowing the market to price in rate cuts later in 2026 rather than further hikes.
Despite that, dollar demand has held up because of a liquidity vacuum: US markets are closed for Presidents Day and activity is thin, so the greenback becomes the default parking place for capital when risk appetite is cautious and liquidity is patchy. Fed funds futures now imply about a 90% chance of no move in March and growing speculation of a first cut around June, but the dollar is not collapsing, because the curve repricing is gradual and risk-off pockets still generate defensive flows into USD.

EUR/USD – DXY Technical Structure Limits Euro Upside

Technically, the DXY is coiling inside a symmetrical triangle around 96.98, hugging the 0.382 Fibonacci retracement at 96.82. A descending trendline from the January high still caps the topside, while the 50-day moving average near 97.20 acts as short-term resistance and the 200-day moving average around 97.60 is the key longer-term ceiling. On the downside, support sits at 96.34 (0.236 Fib), followed by 96.01 and 95.55.
For EUR/USD, that structure matters. A break above 97.60 in DXY would almost certainly push the pair through 1.1850 and toward 1.1800 as euro sellers re-engage. Conversely, a drop through 96.34 would loosen the dollar’s grip and open space for EUR/USD to retest 1.1927–1.1930 and then 1.1995–1.2050. Right now, the index is stuck in the middle of that range, which is exactly why EUR/USD is also stuck between 1.1850 support and 1.1930 resistance rather than trending.

EUR/USD – Technical Map: 1.1853–1.1840 as the First Real Battleground

Short-term charts show EUR/USD testing a rising trendline that has been in place since mid-February, with price hovering around 1.1860–1.1863. Immediate support sits in a tight zone between 1.1853 and roughly 1.1840. The 200-period moving average on lower-timeframe charts comes in around 1.1839–1.1840, reinforcing that band as a technical “must-hold.”
If that 1.1853–1.1840 cluster breaks convincingly, the door opens toward 1.1809–1.1800, the first proper bearish target discussed in the trading calls across the sources you provided. Below that, the broader daily structure would start to look more like a medium-term correction rather than simple intraday noise.
On the topside, the first meaningful resistance is 1.1927–1.1930. That zone marks a rejected high and sits close to the 100-hour moving average, turning it into the pivot between a capped, corrective rebound and a genuine resumption of the uptrend toward 1.1997 and 1.2050. As long as price remains below 1.1930, short-term rallies are suspect.

EUR/USD – Holiday Liquidity, Option Flows and Why 1.1850 Hasn’t Cracked Yet

The pair’s inability to break 1.1850 despite negative euro data and a firm USD is largely a function of positioning and market structure rather than fundamentals suddenly turning supportive. Several factors are at play:
First, the US holiday and China’s festive period both reduce liquidity, which historically dampens follow-through after initial moves and encourages mean-reversion around key averages. That is exactly what is visible in the overlapping hourly candles near 1.1860–1.1890: many participants are simply waiting for the next catalyst.
Second, large option expiries around 1.1853 have turned that level into a magnet. Dealers hedging their books will often buy dips and sell rallies around big strike levels, compressing volatility and reinforcing the range. The fact that this strike aligns with the 200-hour moving average strengthens the defence.

EUR/USD – Macro Cross-Currents: Soft CPI vs Weak Eurozone Industry

Fundamentally, both sides of EUR/USD are sending mixed signals that justify a narrow range:
On one side, US CPI cooling to 2.4% year-on-year and 0.2% month-on-month takes pressure off the Fed, supports the narrative of no hike in March and raises odds of a cut around mid-2026. Softer policy expectations typically weaken the dollar, especially when de-dollarisation and currency debasement narratives are still popular among macro funds.
On the other side, Eurozone industrial production slowing to 1.2% and missing the 1.3% forecast underlines that the euro area is not delivering a growth surprise strong enough to attract aggressive inflows. When capital goods output drops 2%, businesses clearly step back from expansion, and that is not the backdrop where a central bank can credibly pivot hawkishly.
The net result is that both EUR and USD have reasons to be sold and reasons to be bought, which is why the pair is oscillating in a 1.1840–1.1930 corridor rather than trending.

 

EUR/USD – Upcoming Catalysts: Fed Minutes, US Data and Euro’s Lack of Fresh Drivers

The next decisive moves in EUR/USD are likely to come from the dollar side rather than from Europe. This week’s calendar is loaded with US events: FOMC minutes, Q4 GDP revisions, the PCE price index and PMIs. Fed minutes will show how comfortable policymakers are with the disinflation trend and how close they are to openly discussing the timing of cuts.
If the minutes and PCE confirm that inflation is converging smoothly toward target, markets will feel more confident about pricing a mid-2026 cut, which, in isolation, should weigh on the dollar and support a push above 1.1930. Conversely, any hint that the Fed is still worried about underlying price pressures or wages could re-anchor yields higher and push EUR/USD through 1.1850 toward 1.1809.
On the euro side, by contrast, there are no comparable catalysts in the very near term. The ECB is widely expected to stay in wait-and-see mode, and any stronger move toward easing from Frankfurt would, in fact, widen the policy divergence with the Fed and argue for a weaker EUR over time.

EUR/USD – Intraday Trading Zones and Risk Management Levels

From a trading perspective, the structure is clean. For bears, the pivotal zone is 1.1853–1.1840. Below that, the first clear downside magnet is 1.1809, with further potential toward the 200-day moving average around 1.1765 if selling accelerates. That sequence – losing 1.1840, then testing 1.1809 and maybe 1.1765 – would confirm that the market is transitioning from sideways consolidation into a proper downward correction.
For bulls, nothing becomes compelling until the pair decisively reclaims 1.1927–1.1930. A daily close above that band would turn the repeated rejections of 1.1920 into a bear trap and open space toward 1.1995 and 1.2050. In that scenario, dip-buyers would likely use the 1.1890–1.1900 region as a new support area with stops tucked back under 1.1850.
Because liquidity is thin and ranges are tight, the risk-reward profile is better when trades are aligned with those clear levels instead of trying to anticipate every minor swing inside the 1.1860–1.1900 band.

EUR/USD – Bias and Verdict: Sell Rallies Below 1.1930 with 1.1800 as the First Target

Putting all the numbers together, the balance of risks for EUR/USD still leans modestly bearish while price stays capped below roughly 1.1930. The euro faces soft industrial output at 1.2% and a 2% drop in capital goods, the ECB remains reactive rather than proactive, and there is no growth story strong enough to pull capital into the single currency at current levels.
The dollar is not in a roaring bull trend, but DXY holding around 96.97 with a clear support ladder at 96.34–96.01–95.55 limits immediate downside. CPI at 2.4% and 0.2% month-on-month argues against further hikes, yet Fed policy remains tighter than the ECB’s and the US economy looks more resilient than the Eurozone’s industrial complex.
As long as EUR/USD trades below 1.1930 and above 1.1840, the pair is range-bound. However, the asymmetry is clear: a break of 1.1840 opens a relatively direct path toward 1.1809 and potentially 1.1765, whereas a move above 1.1930 still has to chew through 1.1995 and 1.2050 resistance zones.
Verdict: the stance is Bearish / Sell-the-Rally while below 1.1930, with 1.1840 as the key trigger and 1.1809 as the first downside objective.

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