EUR/USD remains vulnerable above 1.0500 ahead of German inflation, US GDP
- EUR/USD off five-year lows but the downside bias remains intact
- The US dollar remains elevated following the USD/JPY upsurge.
- EU-Russia energy crisis eyed ahead of German inflation, US GDP.
EUR/USD is defending 1.0500, moving away from the lowest level since March 2017 even as bears look to extend the losing streak into the sixth straight day this Thursday.
The US dollar strength remains the dominant underlying theme, which continues to exert bearish pressure on the EUR/USD pair. The safe-haven dollar remains attractive in times of growing concerns over global growth amidst China’s lockdowns and aggressive Fed rate hike bets.
Latest leg higher in the greenback, however, is triggered by the surge in USD/JPY on the Bank of Japan’s (BOJ) decision to stick with its ultra-loose monetary policy decision, despite a weaker yen and rising inflation.
EU-Russia energy crisis in focus
On the euro side of the story, the Financial Times (FT) reported that the European Union (EU) energy producers in Germany, Austria, Hungary and Slovakia are preparing to comply with a new payment system for Russian gas sought by the Kremlin.
Tensions surrounding the EU-Russia energy crisis have had a significant downside impact on the euro a day before, accentuating the decline in EUR/USD to five-year lows near 1.0510.
Despite the minor uptick seen in the major over the last hour, the downside remains compelling, as investors continue ignoring the ECB’s hawkish pivot amid unrelenting US dollar strength and aggressive Fed tightening calls.
It’s a busy calendar ahead, as EUR traders watch out for the German Preliminary Inflation data following a bunch of sentiment reports from the bloc. The main event risk for Thursday remains the US Q1 advance GDP release, which is likely to show slowing growth in the world’s biggest economy.