Skip to content
← Coverage stream04 May 2026, 01:19 UTC
Tier 2 specialistfxstreet.comFX

EUR/USD Price Forecast: Holds above 1.1700 as bullish potential seems intact

EUR/USD has held above the 1.1700 support level, reinforcing a bullish technical structure that points to further upside. The pair's resilience near this psychological barrier, despite a composite sentiment reading of -0.35 (USD bearish, EUR bullish), suggests momentum remains in favor of the euro. This comes as our internal data shows spot at 1.1500, trading well below the consensus median target of 1.1800 for March 2026, indicating potential catch-up trade. The headline from fxstreet.com underscores that the trend remains intact, a view supported by the majority of our surveyed firms targeting higher levels over the next three quarters.

Where it sits in our coverage

Our consensus EUR/USD target for March 2026 stands at 1.1800 (median across 8 firms), with Morgan Stanley at the upper bound (1.2000) and BofA and Barclays at the lower (1.1700). Current spot at 1.1500 is 2.6% below consensus, suggesting meaningful upside potential. Fxstreet.com's bullish outlook aligns closely with the upper third of our firm targets, particularly Morgan Stanley and ING, both of which see EUR/USD at 1.1900+ by March next year.

How firms align

Morgan Stanley stands out with the most aggressive near-term forecast at 1.2000 for March 2026, while ING (1.1900) and JPMorgan, Goldman, MUFG, and Deutsche Bank (all 1.1800) are also aligned. BofA and Barclays are the most cautious, with March targets of 1.1700, sitting just above current spot and representing a more conservative view. Our internal /reports/ pages show no recent revision from these firms, so the weight of consensus supports the headline's bullish bias.

What the data shows

Our published research, /research/eurusd-consensus-divergence-may-2026, highlights that EUR/USD consensus sits at 1.22 for December 2026 while spot is 3.87% below that level, reinforcing the view that the currency is undervalued. The headline's technical support at 1.1700 aligns with BofA's and Barclays' near-term targets, but the broader range of targets extends to 1.2000, leaving room for upside beyond that level.

How firms align with this view

consensus1.1800range1.17001.2000

Aligned with the headline view

Contrary positioning

Key takeaways

  • 01EUR/USD holds above 1.1700 support, keeping bullish technicals intact for further gains toward consensus March target of 1.1800.
  • 02Current spot at 1.1500 trades at a 2.6% discount to the March median consensus, suggesting catch-up potential.
  • 03Morgan Stanley's bullish March 2026 target of 1.2000 represents the upper bound, while BofA/Barclays at 1.1700 align with support.
  • 04A break below 1.1700 would invalidate the bullish structure and expose a move toward the 1.1500 area.

Market implications

Key levels to watch include a break above 1.1800 (consensus March median) to target 1.2000 (Morgan Stanley upper bound). The next major calendar event is the ECB policy meeting, where any dovish surprise could test support. Our consensus trajectory implies a steady grind higher, but spot must first reclaim the 1.1700 handle convincingly.

Risks to this view

A sustained break below 1.1700 support would invalidate the bullish structure, potentially targeting 1.1500 (current spot). Dovish ECB guidance or a sudden USD strength catalyst, such as a surprise hawkish Fed pivot, could force a reversal. The wide dispersion in firm targets (1.1700 to 1.2000 for March) underscores uncertainty, and a failure to hold 1.1700 would shift sentiment.

Sentiment by currency

USD-EUR+JPY~GBP~

Composite USD score: -0.35

Sources & References

How we cover this story

FX Bank Forecast aggregates and synthesises FX coverage from institutional newswires. Sentiment scoring and firm tagging are heuristic — verify before trading. We do not endorse third-party content.

FX BANK FORECAST · COVERAGE

Institutional FX coverage in your inbox

Aggregated year-end forecasts, scenario shifts, and curated analyst notes from eight institutional desks. No promotion.