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Relief rallies: euro and sterling ride the geopolitical fade

Euro shakes off the shockwaves. Long USD has been the pain trade. Pound rejoices as risk-off mood recedes.

Avatar of Antonio RuggieroAvatar of Kevin Ford

Written by: Antonio RuggieroKevin Ford
The Market Insights Team

Euro shakes off the shockwaves

Section written by: Antonio Ruggiero

Just like that, the geopolitical drag on the euro seems to have evaporated. EUR/USD has broken decisively above the $1.1620 zone at the time of writing, as markets shake off lingering conflict concerns. The rally began yesterday, fueled by skepticism that tensions would escalate further. Iran’s retaliatory strike on an American air base in Qatar was widely seen as symbolic—“a very weak” response, as Trump described it—with ample advance warning.

Then came the game-changer: President Trump announced a ceasefire between Iran and Israel, brokered in direct talks with Prime Minister Netanyahu. Iran agreed to the terms, conditional on Israel refraining from further strikes. Netanyahu has since confirmed Israel’s compliance in a formal statement.

With that, we can say with some conviction that the euro’s residual geopolitical drag has been fully unwound. Even if the truce is broken, the euro’s downside looks increasingly insulated for several reasons.

First, dollar strength remains elusive. Despite the U.S. assuming a more active role and oil prices rising, entrenched bearish sentiment toward the greenback is dampening its safe-haven appeal. Second, the ECB continues to provide a stabilizing anchor. While the Fed and BoE signal internal divisions, the ECB has maintained a distinctly hawkish tone. Lagarde and others have reinforced expectations that the easing cycle may be nearing its end. That persistence has helped mute the impact of softer data.

Speaking of which, disappointing eurozone PMIs briefly interrupted the EUR/USD surge, with the pair briefly slipping into $1.14 zone. June’s composite PMI held steady at 50.2, unchanged from May, confirming a loss of economic momentum. In her address to the European Parliament, President Lagarde acknowledged weakening near-term prospects based on recent survey data.

Looking ahead, with geopolitics likely to recede into the background, expect trade dynamics to re-emerge as a key driver of euro price action in the weeks ahead.

Euro area PMI stagnates

Long USD has been the pain trade

Section written by: Kevin Ford

With a U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Iran and Israel now in place, market nerves have eased noticeably. The truce, struck in direct talks between President Trump and Prime Minister Netanyahu, and accepted by Iran on the condition of non-escalation, has defused immediate concerns about a broader regional conflict.

While tensions initially spiked following the U.S. strike on Iranian nuclear facilities, fears over uncontrollable escalation have receded. Iran’s retaliatory missile strikes on U.S. bases in Qatar and other allied territories were measured and, critically, resulted in no reported U.S. casualties—helping contain the fallout. The Fordow facility remains a point of concern, as doubts persist about whether the U.S. strike caused any material damage, but that risk has been overtaken by the diplomatic breakthrough.

The Strait of Hormuz remains the one wildcard. Iran’s ability—or willingness—to disrupt oil flows through the vital chokepoint remains unclear. While a blockade would inflict global market pain, it would also harm Iranian economic interests and alienate key allies such as China, which receives over 30% of its crude from the region. For now, that scenario is viewed as low-probability, though it remains on the radar.

Meanwhile, with oil dipping below $70, volatility easing, and stocks finding their footing, it’s becoming clear: long-USD has been the pain trade in North America for the last few months. And although the medium-term bearish outlook for the dollar has slightly changed, this short-lived geopolitical jolt may have just offered US dollar bears a decent re-entry point.

Long USD has been the pain trade over the last months

Also, the recent dip in the dollar may have been amplified by Fed Governors’ commentaries. Fed Governors Bowman and Waller are now aligned in backing a July rate cut, with Bowman signaling support if inflation stays contained. Goolsbee also struck a dovish tone, noting tariffs haven’t sparked inflation as feared, suggesting the case for delaying cuts is fading. Markets responded with a modest rise in July cut odds and a sharp jump in expectations for September and year-end easing, now more in line with the Fed’s latest dot plot. Attention now turns to Powell’s Congressional testimony before the House Financial Services Committee and then repeats it on Wednesday before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.

Pound rejoices as risk-off mood recedes

Section written by: Antonio Ruggiero

Cable is up nearly 1.5% from yesterday’s low of $1.3371, driven by an easing in geopolitical tensions. The rebound is hardly surprising given sterling’s high sensitivity to shifts in risk sentiment. In this environment, the pound remains more vulnerable than the euro. The ongoing debate over a potential shift (away from the US dollar) in global reserve currency status has amplified the euro’s safe-haven credentials—fueled by its defensive profile as the world’s second most-traded currency.

Pound rebounds of 21-day moving average support

While structural hurdles remain to the euro supplanting the dollar, current sentiment leans euro-positive, softening its relative decline amid persistent dollar skepticism. Sterling, by contrast, lacks this buffer. In a post-Brexit world that has embedded a lasting risk premium into the pound, sterling’s sensitivity to global shocks has sharpened—exacerbating its underperformance during periods of geopolitical stress like today.

Reinforcing the trend, EUR/GBP has slipped nearly 0.20% today, as easing geopolitical tensions have provided marginally greater support to sterling than to the euro. Still, the pair remains in a clear uptrend—up 1.3% since the start of June—underpinned by a macro backdrop increasingly unfavourable to the UK. UK PMIs showed only a marginal composite uptick of 0.1, rounding out a soft Q2 picture marked by tepid growth, alongside a loosening labour market. Together, these dynamics could give the Bank of England cover to continue cutting rates—adding momentum to a rally that has defined EUR/GBP trading through June. For now, markets continue to price in two quarter-point cuts by year-end.

Euro and sterling crosses gain

Table: 7-day currency trends and trading ranges

FX table

Key global risk events

Calendar: June 23-27

Data calendar

All times are in BST

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*The FX rates published are provided by Convera’s Market Insights team for research purposes only. The rates have a unique source and may not align to any live exchange rates quoted on other sites. They are not an indication of actual buy/sell rates, or a financial offer.

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