Euro (EUR/USD) Defends $1.1400 as the Dollar Wins the Dual-Hawkish Standoff Into Three Weeks of Central-Bank Catalysts
The pair sits 4.9% below its $1.2019 January high, trapped below its 50- and 100-day averages as the Fed out-hawks a tightening ECB | That's TradingNEWS
Key Points
- EUR/USD trades near $1.1420, just above the critical $1.1400 support and near one-year lows, down 4.9% from its $1.2019 January high.
- A hawkish Fed at 3.50%-3.75% with ~63% September hike odds keeps the dollar firm despite the ECB's June hike to 2.25%.
- The July 14 US inflation print, July 23 ECB decision, and July 29 Fed meeting are the catalysts; $1.1400 breakdown targets $1.10, reclaiming $1.15 opens $1.20.
The euro is treading water Friday, with EUR/USD trading near $1.1420 and clinging to the lower end of a range it has been trapped in all year. The pair eased back from Thursday's push toward $1.1438 and now sits just above the level that matters most: the $1.1400 support that has become the fulcrum of the entire euro-dollar story. The move is close to flat on the session, but that quiet tape masks a market coiled at a decisive technical juncture, one that has already absorbed multiple tests and now faces a dense cluster of central-bank catalysts.
The number that frames the euro's predicament is its distance from the year's high. EUR/USD peaked at $1.2019 in late January 2026 and has ground steadily lower since, shedding roughly 4.9% to reach its current perch near one-year lows. The pair is down about 0.85% over the past month and 2.25% over the trailing twelve months, and it trades roughly 1.8% below its three-month average near $1.1609. This is a currency stuck in a persistent, grinding downtrend against the dollar, pressed toward the floor of its range even as its own fundamentals have arguably improved.
That last point is the paradox at the heart of this pair. The euro is not weak because the eurozone story fell apart. It is weak because the dollar side of the equation turned dominant. The European Central Bank actually turned hawkish this cycle — delivering its first rate hike since 2023 — yet the euro still fell, because the Federal Reserve out-hawked it and drove the dollar higher. The pair is sitting toward the soft end of its range not on euro frailty but on dollar strength, and understanding that distinction is the key to reading where it goes next.
The one-line thesis: EUR/USD is pinned near $1.14, held down by a hawkish-Fed-driven strong dollar even as the ECB itself tightened, caught in a dual-hawkish standoff the dollar keeps winning. The $1.1400 line is the line in the sand, and the next three weeks — the July 14 US inflation print, the July 23 ECB decision, and the July 29 Fed meeting — will decide whether the euro breaks down toward $1.10 or reclaims $1.15 and mounts a run back toward $1.20. Until then, the pair trades the range and waits on the meetings.
The $1.1400 Support Is the Fulcrum of the Entire Pair
Everything in EUR/USD's near-term technical picture comes down to one level: $1.1400. This is the critical support that marks the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement of the multi-year 2022-to-2026 rally, and it has become the battleground that will determine the pair's second-half trajectory. Gold-standard support levels earn their status by being tested repeatedly and holding, and $1.1400 has done exactly that — absorbing the March 2026 tariff-shock low and the June intraday lows near $1.1435 without giving way on a sustained basis.
The structure around this level has taken on the shape of a potential triple top, with the $1.14 to $1.15 zone forming a neckline that the pair keeps testing from above. A confirmed break below $1.1400 on a weekly closing basis would validate that triple-top breakdown and open the door to a deeper decline toward the channel floor. That is the bearish scenario the charts are flagging, and it is why every daily close near $1.14 is watched so closely. Losing this level would be a technically significant event, not just another wiggle in the range.
But the setup cuts both ways, and the bullish counterargument is equally clean. The $1.14 to $1.15 zone has already absorbed multiple tests, and the broader ascending channel structure that has defined the pair over the longer term remains intact. If $1.1400 holds on a weekly closing basis, the triple-top neckline becomes a failed breakdown — and a failed breakdown is itself a bullish signal, often marking the low before a reversal higher. The market is essentially at a binary technical juncture: hold $1.1400 and the failed-breakdown case builds; lose it and the triple-top target toward $1.10 activates.
For traders, this makes $1.1400 the single most important number to anchor around. Above it, the euro retains its range-bound-with-upward-bias structure and the bulls keep a foothold. Below it, the technical damage accelerates and the path opens toward $1.10 and lower. The resolution of this standoff is unlikely to be a purely technical event — it will most probably be forced by the central-bank meetings and the US inflation data landing over the next few weeks. The chart has drawn the line; the macro calendar will decide which side of it the euro finishes on. That is why the next four to six weeks are genuinely decisive for the pair rather than just another stretch of range-trading.
The Resistance Ladder and the Moving-Average Wall Overhead
While $1.1400 anchors the downside, the overhead structure explains why every euro bounce has stalled. The pair is trading below both its 50-day and 100-day exponential moving averages — roughly 0.68% under the 50-day and 1.21% under the 100-day — and price below those medium-term averages confirms the near-term momentum favors the bears. Until EUR/USD can reclaim those moving averages, rallies are countertrend bounces within a broader downtrend, and the sellers retain control of the tape.
The immediate resistance ladder starts with the $1.1438 level that capped Thursday's advance, followed by the psychologically loaded $1.15 handle. That $1.15 level has been a genuine ceiling — the pair has repeatedly struggled to hold above it throughout the year, and each attempt has faded. Clearing and holding above $1.15 would be the first real sign the euro has broken out of its cage, but so far the dollar's firmness has slammed the door on every try. Above $1.15, the next targets sit near $1.1543 and then $1.1603, which aligns with the three-month average the pair has fallen below.
The moving-average dynamics add nuance to the timing. Some technical models project the 50-day average drifting toward $1.14 and the 200-day gradually declining in the coming month, which means the medium-term averages are slowly converging toward the current price. That convergence can act as a compression mechanism — as the averages tighten around spot, the eventual break tends to be sharper. A pair coiling beneath a cluster of moving averages near a major support line is a pair building energy for a decisive move.
The technical sentiment readings capture the indecision. Momentum indicators have been split, with a modest lean that shifts between neutral and mildly bearish depending on the session. That mixed signal is the chart's way of expressing the same standoff visible in the fundamentals: a market that cannot commit to a direction because the two opposing forces — hawkish Fed dollar strength versus hawkish ECB euro support — are too evenly matched. For the forecast, the resistance map gives a clear framework: the euro has to reclaim $1.15 to shift the near-term structure, and it has to hold $1.1400 to avoid a breakdown. Between those two levels lies a compressed range that the central-bank meetings will most likely resolve. Above $1.15, bulls take control; below $1.1400, bears do.
The Dollar Is in the Driver's Seat
The most important thing to understand about EUR/USD right now is that the dollar, not the euro, is steering the pair. The US Dollar Index broke above 100 in June and has stayed firm, and that dollar strength is the primary force pressing the euro toward the floor of its range. When one side of a currency pair is moving decisively, it dominates the cross, and the dollar's hawkish-Fed-fueled strength has been the decisive force in 2026. The euro's own story turned more hawkish this cycle, and it still could not overcome the greenback's momentum.
The driver behind the dollar's firmness is straightforward: the Federal Reserve's hawkish posture. With the Fed holding rates at 3.50% to 3.75% and signaling it could hike further, the dollar has commanded a yield advantage that pulls capital in and keeps it bid. Higher-for-longer US rates make dollar-denominated assets more attractive, and that demand transmits straight into a stronger dollar and a weaker euro-dollar rate. The safe-haven bid from the Middle East conflict has reinforced the move, with investors seeking dollar safety amid geopolitical turmoil.
This is why the euro's fundamentals have taken a back seat. The ECB raised rates for the first time in three years, an unambiguously hawkish development that in a vacuum should have lifted the euro. Instead, EUR/USD fell, because the dollar side of the equation was even more hawkish and the greenback's firmness overwhelmed the euro's improved rate story. The pair is a relative game, and in a contest between two tightening central banks, the currency whose central bank is tightening harder — or is perceived as more likely to keep tightening — wins. Right now that is the dollar.
For the forecast, the dollar is the variable to watch above all others. As long as the dollar stays firm on hawkish Fed expectations, EUR/USD holds the middle-to-lower end of its range and struggles to break above $1.15. The path to a meaningfully stronger euro runs almost entirely through a weaker dollar — which would require the Fed to soften its stance, most likely on evidence that US inflation is cooling enough to take a hike off the table. Until that happens, the euro is fighting an uphill battle against a currency backed by the more hawkish central bank. The euro-dollar rate is, at its core, a dollar story right now, and the dollar has the upper hand.
The Fed's Hawkish Tilt Keeps the Yield Gap Wide
Digging into the US side, the Fed's posture is the engine of dollar strength and therefore the anchor on the euro. The central bank held rates at 3.50% to 3.75% at its June meeting and signaled that further tightening could be warranted, with markets pricing a roughly 63% probability of a hike as soon as September and a high likelihood of at least one hike by year-end. That is a central bank leaning toward more restriction at a time when much of the developed world is contemplating easing, and it hands the dollar a structural yield advantage.
The inflation backdrop is what keeps the Fed hawkish. US inflation has been running elevated, and the renewed oil spike from the Iran conflict threatens to push it higher still, reinforcing the case for keeping rates high or raising them further. The June meeting minutes revealed a committee that, while divided, saw upside inflation risk as elevated enough to warrant potential firming. A Fed worried about inflation is a Fed that keeps rates high, and high US rates mean a strong dollar and a pressured euro.
The yield differential is the mechanical transmission channel. The gap between US and eurozone policy rates — even after the ECB's hike — remains wide enough to favor the dollar, and every incremental signal that the Fed will stay restrictive widens the euro's disadvantage. Currency pairs between two developed economies are heavily driven by relative interest-rate expectations, and the market's read that the Fed will out-tighten the ECB is precisely why the euro sits near one-year lows despite its own hawkish turn.
For the forecast, the Fed's July 29 meeting is the pivotal US-side event. A Fed that hikes or signals an imminent hike would widen the yield gap further, strengthen the dollar, and likely force EUR/USD below $1.1400 toward $1.10. A Fed that softens — most plausibly on evidence of cooling inflation — would narrow the gap, weaken the dollar, and give the euro room to reclaim $1.15 and beyond. The June inflation print on July 14 is the key input that will shape those odds. The Fed is the dominant force in this pair right now, and its posture over the next three weeks will most likely determine whether the euro breaks down or recovers. The euro's fate is being decided in Washington as much as in Frankfurt.
The ECB Turned Hawkish, and the Euro Fell Anyway
The most counterintuitive part of the euro story is that the European Central Bank delivered a genuinely hawkish surprise this cycle — and the currency still weakened. The ECB raised its deposit rate to 2.25% from 2.00% in June, its first rate hike since 2023, a decisive move away from the easing bias that had defined its recent policy. In a normal environment, a central bank's first hike in three years would send its currency ripping higher. Instead, the euro fell against the dollar, a stark illustration of how thoroughly the dollar side is dominating the pair.
The reason the hike failed to lift the euro is twofold. First, the market had largely anticipated the move, so much of the hawkish news was already priced into the rate before the decision landed. Second, and more important, the Fed's simultaneous hawkish signaling meant that even as the ECB tightened, the relative rate advantage still favored the dollar. A hike that closes some of the gap but leaves the dollar with a wide yield lead is not enough to reverse the pair's direction. The euro's tightening was real, but it was out-muscled.
Underneath the headline hike, the ECB's messaging has been mixed, which adds to the euro's indecision. Some policymakers have struck hawkish notes, warning of lingering inflation effects from the Iran conflict and pointing to core inflation that remains elevated — signals that argue for more tightening. Others have leaned more balanced, emphasizing a two-sided view of inflation and growth risks that suggests caution about hiking too aggressively. That internal split mirrors the divided Fed, and it leaves the market uncertain about how far the ECB is willing to go.
The market is now pricing over 30 basis points of additional ECB tightening this year, signaling expectations for at least one more hike, possibly as soon as September. That is the euro's structural support — a central bank that is expected to keep tightening even as it navigates a fragile growth backdrop. For the forecast, the ECB's hawkishness is the euro's best fundamental argument, but it only translates into a stronger currency if it outpaces or matches the Fed. As long as the Fed is seen as the more hawkish of the two, the ECB's tightening provides a floor for the euro without providing lift. The euro turned hawkish and still fell; that tells you everything about which central bank is winning the tug-of-war.
The Dual-Hawkish Standoff and the Rate-Differential Math
The euro-dollar pair has become a contest between two tightening central banks, and the math of the rate differential is what will ultimately break the standoff. Currency pairs move on relative interest-rate expectations, and the core structural case for a stronger euro rests on the idea that the remaining gap between US and eurozone rates compresses over time — either because the Fed eventually cuts while the ECB holds or hikes, or because the ECB tightens faster than the Fed. That compression is the mechanical driver of any sustained euro recovery.
The scale of the potential move is significant if the gap closes. Estimates suggest that each 50 basis points of differential compression adds roughly 300 to 400 pips to EUR/USD. With a remaining rate gap of around 1.50%, a full compression toward neutral would imply roughly 900 to 1,200 pips of potential upside — the mathematical basis for the bullish year-end targets in the $1.22 to $1.25 zone that some forecasters hold. That is the bull case in a nutshell: if the rate divergence flips from dollar-favorable to euro-favorable, the pair has substantial room to run higher.
The problem for euro bulls is timing. The dual-hawkish pivot of mid-2026 — both central banks turning more hawkish at once — pushed back the timeline for that compression. Instead of the Fed cutting while the ECB holds, both are tightening, which keeps the gap wide and delays the euro-favorable divergence. The core bull structure remains intact — the gap should eventually compress as the Fed's cycle matures — but the market has had to reset its expectations for when that happens. The euro's upside case is deferred, not destroyed.
For the forecast, the rate-differential math frames both scenarios. The bullish path requires clearer divergence: an ECB that keeps hiking with hawkish guidance combined with Fed data that takes a US hike off the table. That combination would compress the gap in the euro's favor and send the pair toward $1.20 and above. The bearish path is the opposite: a Fed that actually hikes one or two more times while the ECB is constrained by a fragile eurozone economy, widening the gap and driving EUR/USD below $1.1400 toward $1.10. The standoff is real, and the incoming data will tip it. The rate gap is the euro's ceiling and its opportunity — which one it becomes depends on the central banks.
The July 23 ECB Decision Is the Euro's Big Test
The euro's most important near-term catalyst is the ECB's policy decision on July 23, and it functions as the euro-side counterpart to the Fed's July 29 meeting. With the deposit rate currently at 2.25% after June's first hike since 2023, the market will be scrutinizing whether the ECB signals more tightening ahead or strikes a more cautious tone. The decision and the accompanying guidance will most likely determine whether the euro can build on its hawkish turn or whether the tightening cycle stalls.
The bullish scenario for the euro runs through a hawkish ECB. If the central bank hikes again at the July meeting, or signals a September hike with confident guidance about persistent inflation, it would reinforce the rate-compression case and give the euro genuine support. Combined with a Fed that softens on cooling US inflation, an assertive ECB is the single most important ingredient in any move back toward $1.20. The market is already pricing more than 30 basis points of additional tightening this year, so the ECB has room to validate those expectations and lift the euro.
The bearish scenario is an ECB constrained by the eurozone's fragile economy. With regional GDP growth running at a weak pace, the ECB faces a genuine tension between fighting elevated inflation and avoiding choking off a soft recovery. If the central bank signals caution — emphasizing growth risks and downplaying further hikes — it would undercut the euro's rate-support story precisely when the dollar is strong. A dovish ECB pivot at July's meeting would remove the euro's main fundamental prop and likely accelerate a break below $1.1400.
The oil-inflation dynamic complicates the ECB's calculus. The Iran conflict has pushed oil higher, and by the ECB's own modeling, every $10 sustained increase in oil prices adds roughly 0.5 percentage points to eurozone inflation. With oil up substantially since the conflict began, that implies meaningful additional inflation pressure — which argues for the ECB to keep tightening. But the same oil spike hurts eurozone growth, which argues for caution. The ECB is caught between an inflation impulse that demands hikes and a growth drag that demands restraint, and how it resolves that tension on July 23 will move the euro. For the forecast, the ECB meeting is the euro's chance to prove its hawkish turn has staying power. A hawkish hold or hike supports the pair; a dovish tilt sinks it.
Oil and Iran: A Double-Edged Sword for the Euro
The Middle East conflict and its effect on oil create a genuinely two-sided situation for the euro, and untangling it is essential to reading the pair. The Iran conflict has been the single most disruptive macro event of 2026 for currency markets, sending Brent crude to two-week highs after renewed US-Iran strikes and injecting persistent volatility into every risk-sensitive asset, the euro included. The complication is that the oil shock affects the euro through two opposing channels that partly cancel each other out.
On one side, higher oil is inflationary for the eurozone, which argues for more ECB tightening and, in theory, a stronger euro. The ECB's own modeling quantifies this: every $10 sustained rise in oil adds roughly half a percentage point to eurozone inflation, and with oil up substantially since the conflict began, the region faces meaningful added price pressure. That inflation impulse is part of why the market prices further ECB hikes, and to the extent it forces the ECB's hand, it supports the euro through the rate channel.
On the other side, higher oil is a growth drag for the eurozone, which is a net energy importer far more exposed to oil shocks than the United States. Expensive energy squeezes European households and industry, weakens an already fragile recovery, and clouds the growth outlook — all euro-negative. The conflict also drives safe-haven demand toward the dollar, pulling capital away from the euro. So the same oil spike that supports the euro through inflation-driven ECB hikes simultaneously undercuts it through the growth drag and the dollar's safe-haven bid.
The net effect has been euro-negative on balance, because the growth drag and the dollar safe-haven bid have outweighed the inflation-driven rate support. The euro held near its weakest level in a year precisely as oil climbed, with the market focused more on the eurozone's energy vulnerability than on the ECB-hike implications. For the forecast, the oil-Iran dynamic is a wildcard that can move the euro hard in either direction depending on which channel dominates. A full collapse of the Iran ceasefire and an oil re-spike would most likely be euro-negative, driving safe-haven dollar demand and a break below $1.1400. A durable de-escalation that cools oil would ease the growth drag and could help the euro recover. The conflict is the swing factor sitting on top of the central-bank standoff.
Fragile Growth and Political Noise Weigh on the Euro
Beneath the rate story, the eurozone's fundamental backdrop gives the euro a structural handicap that the dollar does not share. Regional GDP growth has been running at a fragile pace near 0.8%, a weak footing that constrains how aggressively the ECB can tighten and leaves the euro vulnerable to any external shock. A currency backed by a sluggish economy is inherently more fragile than one backed by resilient growth, and the eurozone's soft expansion is a persistent drag on the euro's ability to rally even when its rate story turns hawkish.
The fiscal picture adds a layer of complexity. Germany's cabinet approved a 2027 budget draft outlining €555.4 billion in spending with borrowing rising to €203.6 billion, up from earlier estimates. Expanded fiscal spending can support growth, which is euro-supportive over time, but rising borrowing also raises questions about debt trajectories in the bloc's anchor economy. The market's read on European fiscal expansion has been mixed — welcome as growth support, watched warily for its debt implications — and that ambivalence has done little to lift the euro.
Political uncertainty compounds the caution. In France, the far-right National Rally leads the polls ahead of the 2027 presidential election, with its leader having confirmed a presidential bid, while the centrist camp lacks a clear successor to the current president. Political uncertainty in a core eurozone economy tends to weigh on the euro by raising the risk premium investors demand to hold the currency. Markets dislike uncertainty, and an unresolved succession picture in France plus a rising far-right adds a layer of political risk that sits in the background of every euro trade.
For the forecast, the eurozone's fundamentals argue for keeping euro upside modest even in bullish scenarios. The fragile growth, the fiscal questions, and the political noise all cap how far the euro can run and leave it more exposed to shocks than the dollar. This is why even the constructive forecasts frame the euro's recovery as a grind back toward $1.20 rather than an explosive rally, and why the base case is a range-bound pair with only a modest upward bias. The euro's structural handicaps mean the dollar has to weaken meaningfully for the euro to strengthen sustainably — the euro cannot easily pull itself higher on its own fundamentals. The eurozone backdrop is the anchor that keeps the euro's ceiling low.
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The US Data Gauntlet That Will Move the Pair
The euro's next decisive move is most likely to come from US data, and the headline event is the June inflation print on July 14. Because the dollar is in the driver's seat and the Fed's posture hinges on inflation, that print is the single most important input for EUR/USD in the near term. A hot number would cement the Fed's hawkish bias, strengthen the dollar, and pressure the euro toward and through $1.1400. A cool number would ease rate-hike fears, soften the dollar, and give the euro room to reclaim $1.15 and challenge its resistance.
The data lands in a sequence that builds toward the central-bank meetings. The inflation print on July 14 sets the tone, followed by additional US data through the month that will refine the market's read on Fed policy. That flow feeds directly into the July 23 ECB decision and the July 29 Fed meeting, creating a compressed window in which the euro's range will most likely be resolved. The pair is frozen near $1.14 precisely because traders are unwilling to commit ahead of this gauntlet — the risk of a sharp move on any of these events is too high.
The asymmetry in the setup is worth noting. Because the dollar has been the dominant force and the euro sits near the lower end of its range, a cool US inflation print has outsized potential to spark a euro recovery — a dollar pullback would let the pent-up euro rate-support story finally express itself. Conversely, a hot print reinforces the existing trend and could trigger the technical breakdown below $1.1400 that the charts are flagging. The data has the power to either break the range higher through a dollar reversal or lower through a dollar surge.
For the forecast, the US calendar is the primary trigger to watch, ahead of even the ECB meeting. The euro's direction is a dollar story, and the dollar's direction is a Fed story, and the Fed's direction is an inflation story. That chain means the June inflation print is effectively the first domino for EUR/USD. Traders should watch it closely, alongside the dollar index and US rate-hike odds, as the clearest early tells for where the pair heads. A cooperative print opens the euro's recovery path; a hot print activates the breakdown. The next three weeks of US data, ECB policy, and Fed policy will settle a range the euro has held all year.
Bull and Bear Scenarios: $1.25 Recovery or $1.10 Breakdown
Mapping the paths gives traders a clear framework around the catalysts. The bull scenario — carrying roughly a one-in-four probability in some analyses — sees EUR/USD recovering toward $1.21 to $1.26. The trigger is clean rate divergence: US inflation cools faster than expected through the summer, taking the projected Fed hike off the table, while the ECB delivers another hike in July or September. That combination flips the rate differential in the euro's favor, and the resulting compression sends the pair back toward $1.22 to $1.25, consistent with the more constructive year-end bank targets. The path requires the dollar to weaken and the ECB to stay hawkish simultaneously.
The bear scenario — also carrying roughly a one-in-four probability — sees EUR/USD falling to $1.08 to $1.13. The trigger is a collapse of the Iran ceasefire, an oil re-spike, and a Fed that delivers one or two actual rate hikes before year-end that the ECB cannot match given the eurozone's fragile 0.8% growth. In that case, EUR/USD breaks below the critical $1.1400 support, confirms the triple-top breakdown, and extends toward $1.10 or lower as the dollar re-establishes a commanding yield advantage. The path requires the dollar to strengthen further and the eurozone economy to constrain the ECB.
The base case, holding the highest probability, is a range-bound pair with a modest upward bias, trading between roughly $1.13 and $1.21 through the second half of 2026. In this scenario, neither central bank decisively out-hawks the other, the dollar stays firm but does not surge, and the euro chops in the middle of its range without a clean breakout. This is the most likely outcome absent a clear catalyst, and it reflects the genuine standoff between a hawkish Fed and a hawkish ECB with the dollar holding a narrow edge. The pair grinds rather than trends.
The honest read is that the near-term setup slightly favors the bears given the dollar's dominance and the euro's position near the lower end of its range, while the longer-term structural case — eventual rate compression as the Fed's cycle matures — favors the bulls. The decisive variable is the relative hawkishness of the two central banks, which the July meetings will clarify. The $1.1400 floor and the $1.15 ceiling are the lines that will tell traders which scenario is winning. Above $1.15, the recovery case builds; below $1.1400, the breakdown activates. Everything between is the range the euro has been trapped in all year, waiting on the meetings to break it.
What to Watch: $1.1400, the Dollar, and Three Weeks of Catalysts
For traders positioning through the end of July, the watch list comes down to three signals. The first is the $1.1400 support level. As long as EUR/USD holds it on a weekly closing basis, the failed-breakdown thesis stays alive and the euro retains its range-bound structure with a modest upward bias. A decisive weekly close below $1.1400 confirms the triple-top breakdown and shifts the risk toward $1.10. This is the line to anchor every euro trade around — it is the difference between a base and a breakdown.
The second signal is the dollar. Because the euro's direction is largely a derivative of the greenback, watching the dollar index is watching EUR/USD in reverse. A dollar that keeps firming on hawkish Fed expectations caps the euro and pressures it toward $1.1400; a dollar that rolls over — most likely on a cool US inflation print — is the catalyst that lets the euro reclaim $1.15 and mount a recovery. Alongside the dollar, track the US-eurozone rate differential and Fed hike odds, since those are the forces driving the currency.
The third and largest signal is the three-week cluster of catalysts. The June US inflation print on July 14 sets the rate-hike odds, the ECB decision on July 23 tests whether the euro's hawkish turn has staying power, and the Fed meeting on July 29 delivers the verdict on the dollar. Layered on top is the Iran conflict, where any escalation or de-escalation can move the euro through the oil-inflation-growth channel. The interplay of these events over the next four to six weeks is what will break the pair out of its year-long range.
The bottom line for EUR/USD at $1.1420: this is a currency pinned near one-year lows, coiled just above its critical $1.1400 support, held down by a hawkish-Fed-driven strong dollar even though the ECB itself turned hawkish with its first hike since 2023. The pair is caught in a dual-hawkish standoff the dollar keeps winning, with the Iran oil shock cutting both ways for the euro and a fragile eurozone economy capping its upside. Whether the euro breaks down toward $1.10 or recovers toward $1.20 will be decided not by the chart but by the relative hawkishness of the Fed and the ECB, which the July meetings will clarify. Until then, the euro trades the range, defends $1.1400, and waits on the data.