Euro tumbles as EU/Russia tensions rise, Russo-Ukraine peace talks optimism fades


Here is what you need to know on Friday, April 1:

The euro tumbled on Thursday as investors fretted about rising EU/Russia economic tensions after Russian President Vladimir Putin doubled down on a demand that European nations pay for Russian gas in roubles, exacerbating fears that Russia might block energy exports to the continent. This, coupled with a generalized paring back on recent optimism about alleged progress in Russo-Ukraine peace talks, which recommence on Friday, contributed to risk-off flows and downside in global bond yields, with these moves most acute in Europe. Thus, the euro was the worst performing G10 currency, with EUR/USD dropping 0.8% from intra-day highs near 1.1200 to current levels in the mid-1.1000s.

The weakness in EUR/USD helped give the DXY a lift, with the trade-weighted index of major USD pairs rallying 0.5% to around 98.30 from weekly lows in the 97.70 area. The upside had little to do with another rise in US inflation in February as per the Core PCE Price Index, or the latest very solid weekly jobless claims figures, both of which support the economic rationale behind the Fed’s recent hawkish pivot. Indeed, against the rest of the G10 currencies, the US dollar was fairly mixed, with focus now shifting to the release of the official US labour market report for March on Friday.

The best performing G10 currency was again the Japanese yen, with the safe-haven currency benefitting from the downside bias to global equity market trade and in global bond yields, thus extending on a much overdue month/quarter-end recovery after weeks of underperformance. USD/JPY stabilized below the 122.00 level, with the bears eyeing a retest of 120.00. GBP/USD, meanwhile, was a tad higher on the day, but remained within recent intra-day ranges in the mid-1.3100s and capped by its 21-Day Moving Average.

Finally, it was a mixed picture for the commodity-sensitive Aussie, kiwi and loonie. USD/CAD was flat and managed to shrug off sharp losses in the crude oil complex as a result of the announcement of a historic Strategic Petroleum Reserve release out of the US (1M barrels per day for the next six months). The pair remained underneath the 1.2500 level and not far below recent multi-month lows printed in the 1.2430 area earlier in the week. AUD/USD, meanwhile, dropped 0.3% to back below 0.7500 but remains well within recent ranges and near to multi-month highs in the mid-0.7500s, while NZD/USD fell 0.6% to back under 0.6950, putting the pair back near the middle of this week’s approximate 0.6875-0.7000 ranges.



Read More:Euro tumbles as EU/Russia tensions rise, Russo-Ukraine peace talks optimism fades

2022-03-31 19:38:21

Get real time updates directly on you device, subscribe now.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More

Get more stuff like this
in your inbox

Subscribe to our mailing list and get interesting stuff and updates to your email inbox.

Thank you for subscribing.

Something went wrong.