Chart Of The Day: Will The ECB Actually Be Able To Devalue The Euro?

 | Sep 08, 2020 10:08

As it slips for a sixth straight day, the euro is fluctuating. Nonetheless, it's the longest losing streak for the single currency since Apr. 6.

All this is happening ahead of Thursday's ECB meeting. Bulls are worried about it whereas bears are eagerly anticipating the aftermath.

Consensus has the ECB holding rates, but indicating that downside risks have intensified, suggesting additional easing is on the table before the year is out. Popular opinion expects the common currency will be further pressured.

The ECB is concerned about the rising euro as they try to stoke economic growth in the eurozone after lockdowns, which were meant to slow the spread of COVID-19 in Europe. The euro’s current strengthening is expected to trigger another cut in the central bank’s inflation forecast, lowering the ECB's target, which is now just under 2 percent.

However, the ECB plays second fiddle to the all-powerful Federal Reserve, which is trying desperately to reignite the world's largest economy which has also been hammered by coronavirus lockdowns, via aggressive stimulus measures, upending the Fed's decades-long inflation policy, and in the process deliberately weakening the US dollar.

Ahead of the Fed's juggernaut, we believe there's little European policymakers can do to alter their currency’s trajectory, since it's priced against king dollar.

Of course, we don't actually know what will happen. But the technical charts are forecasting better odds for a continued euro climb, despite what the ECB might wish.