Fundamental view:
The EUR bounced against greenback in the previous week and reached 1.2149 but was unable to hold on to gains above the 1.2100 figure. The advance is related to the dollar self-weakness. The American currency fell off investors’ radar after the release of a tepid Nonfarm Payroll report, maintaining its sour tone throughout the week. US government debt yields soared, a sign of mounting optimism mostly related to the passing of a US stimulus package. Long-term bond yields reached levels lastly seen in March 2020 but quickly retreated afterwards. Optimism faded as the week went by, but the greenback remained near its weekly low.
Europe Exports monthly report & Current Account n.s.a. on 9th February and US CPI monthly report on 10th February favored downtrend for the pair whereas Europe Industrial Production monthly report and industrial report on 8th February and Wholesale Price Index on 11th February created uptrend for the pair.
The major economic events deciding the movement of the pair in the next week are Europe Employment Change quarterly report, Europe GDP quarterly report at Feb 16, Fed Industrial Production yearly report at Feb 17, ECB Monetary Policy Meeting Accounts, US Initial Jobless Claims, Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index at Feb 18, and FOMC Member Rosengren Speech at Feb 19.
EUR/USD Weekly outlook: