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EUR/USD is holding steady in thin markets to wrap up the trading year.
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The Euro is set for a 3% gain against the US Dollar for the year.
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US data continues to miss the mark as the economic outlook softens.
The EUR/USD is trading flat on Friday, the last trading session of 2023. The Euro (EUR) is on pace to close up 3% against the US Dollar (USD) for 2023, rallying 5.8% from the year’s bottom bids near 1.0450 in October. The EUR/USD is still down nearly 2% from 2023’s peak at 1.1275 set in July, but the pair is leaning firmly into the bullish side as broader markets continue to sell off the Greenback in anticipation of rate cuts from the Federal Reserve (Fed) in 2024.
US Dollar to end 2023 on the low side as markets bet big on rate cuts
With meaningful Eurozone economic data missing from the calendar until the January 4 HCOB Eurozone Composite Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), the heavy lifting rests on the US data docket to round out the trading year.
The US Chicago PMI for December missed the mark on Friday, printing a contractionary 46.9 versus November’s 18-month high of 55.8, beating the median market forecast of 51.0. Softening US economic data continues to intuitively increase market risk appetite, as a weak economic outlook increases the likelihood of a faster rate hike from the Fed in 2024. Next year, which currently sees rates cut by up to 75 basis points until the end of 2024; Money markets are pricing in a 160 basis point exit from the Fed’s key reference rate by the end of next December.
EUR/USD Technical Outlook
With the EUR/USD stuck in place near 1.1050 on the intraday charts, the Euro is set to drift between the 50-hour and 200-hour Simple Moving Averages (SMAs) as the 2023 trading year rounds the corner into 2024.
A protracted post-holiday trading week will give way to another extended holiday following the New Year’s market closures, and the EUR/USD is set to head into the new year catching technical support from the 200-hour SMA just above the 1.1000 handle.
Daily candlesticks tell a notably overbought story with the Euro pulling back from Thursday’s multi-month highs near 1.1150 and the 50-day SMA accelerating into a bullish cross of the 200-day SMA near 1.0850. Technical indicators are also flashing warning signs of a possible extended pullback with the Relative Strength Index (RSI) flashing a retreat from overbought conditions on a 14-day basis.