Brown Brothers Harriman’s Elias Haddad writes that mixed Eurozone Consumer Price Index (CPI) data and a fully priced 25 bps European Central Bank (ECB) hike leave the Euro (EUR) under pressure but not collapsing. Haddad argues that rate hikes in a sluggish, high-inflation environment are not positive for the Euro, yet expects EUR/USD to form a bottom around 1.1400, reflecting stronger United States (US) growth versus the Eurozone.
"Eurozone May CPI was mixed, EUR reaction muted. Headline CPI matched consensus at 3.2% y/y vs. 3.0% in April and tracked closer to the ECB’s Q2 baseline forecast (3.1%) than to its adverse (3.6%) and severe (4.1%) scenarios."
"However, core CPI ran hot at 2.5% y/y (consensus: 2.4%) vs. 2.2% in April and tracked closer to the ECB’s Q2 severe scenario (2.4%) than to its baseline forecast (2.2%) and adverse scenario (2.3%)."
"Worrisomely, services CPI surged to a seven-month high at 3.5% y/y, raising the risk of a persist pickup in inflation."
"Rate hikes in a sluggish growth, high inflation environment, is not bullish for EUR but should help cushion the downside."
"We expect EUR/USD to carve out a bottom around 1.1400, reflecting a stronger US growth outlook relative to the Eurozone."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)