Goldman Sachs backs the euro as the dollar hits two-month lows

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down 0.5% against a basket of major currencies, to trade at 91.156 – it’s lowest level since March 4.

On Friday, Goldman Sachs upped its forecasts for the euro against the greenback to suggest more appreciation in the near term. It raised its three-month target to $1.25 from $1.21, while holding its 12-month forecast at $1.28.

Analysts, led by Co-head of Global FX, Rates and EM Strategy Zach Pandl, also issued a new long trade recommendation for the euro with a $1.25 target price and a stop of $1.175, meaning Goldman will abandon the trade if it the euro sinks below that level. The common currency was changing hands at $1.2032 on Monday.

“Market expectations for European growth should improve over the next few months on the back of faster vaccinations and falling Covid-19 hospitalizations,” they said. To date, Europe’s vaccination program has lagged some other developed countries’, however it is seen picking up into the summer.


Goldman’s euro call comes after equity strategists at the bank raised their price target for the pan-European Stoxx 600 index. They expect a 10% total return over the next 12 months, outpacing the 6% expected from the S&P 500.

The analysts gave a number of additional reasons why the euro looked set to rise. These included the anticipated acceleration in economic growth in Europe, which they said would likely see the European Central Bank slow the rate of its asset purchases under its pandemic emergency purchase programme (PEPP) after its June meeting.

The International Monetary Fund said last week that Europe’s economy is on track to return to its pre-crisis levels in 2022, growing by 3.9% next year.

“We think the combination of rising euro area growth expectations, solid equity returns for the region, initial normalization signals from the ECB, and more stable Fed pricing will extend the recent turn higher in the euro,” the Goldman analysts said in the note.

They added that the main risk to their euro trade would be unexpected hawkish tones from Fed officials, particularly signs that the central bank’s June Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) will indicate a 2023 rate hike.

“On the broad dollar, the current market debate boils down to whether Q1 (first quarter) strength reflected sustainable U.S. outperformance due to the Biden fiscal agenda, or whether it reflected an earlier U.S. vaccination timeline and the repricing of the Fed,” Pandl added in an email Monday.

“We think it’s the latter, so with other countries speeding up their vaccinations and Fed pricing stabilizing, the dollar can turn lower again.”

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