When are the German/ Eurozone flash HCOB PMIs for April and how could they affect EUR/USD?
The German and Eurozone flash HCOB PMIs for April, due later this week, are the next major test for EUR/USD after the pair slipped to 1.1500. Given the ECB's cautious stance and weak manufacturing data, a downside surprise could reinforce euro weakness, while a beat might offer temporary relief. Our consensus shows a wide dispersion of year-end targets, signaling deep uncertainty about the euro's trajectory. This release is critical because it will either validate or challenge the market's pricing of a prolonged ECB pause.
Where it sits in our coverage
Our consensus EUR/USD target sits at 1.1800 for March 2026 (median across 8 firms), with Goldman and Deutsche Bank at the upper bound (1.2500 for Dec26) and Barclays and BofA at the lower end (1.1700/1.2100 for Mar26). The headline's focus on PMIs as a short-term catalyst aligns more closely with the bearish camp — BofA and Barclays share that cautious outlook, given the euro's current level well below the consensus median.
How firms align
BofA (Mar26 target 1.1700, Dec26 1.2200) and Barclays (Mar26 1.1700, Dec26 1.2100) are the most bearish, consistent with a view that weak PMIs could drag EUR/USD lower. In contrast, Goldman (Dec26 1.2500) and Morgan Stanley (Mar26 1.2000) represent the bullish tail, suggesting any PMI weakness may be transitory. The wide range reflects deep disagreement on the euro's fundamental drivers.
What the data shows
Our research /research/eurusd-consensus-divergence-may-2026 highlights that EUR/USD spot sits 3.87% below the March 2026 consensus target, implying either a catch-up rally or further downside risk if data disappoints. The PMI release will be a key input for that divergence to resolve.
How firms align with this view
Aligned with the headline view
Contrary positioning
Key takeaways
- 01EUR/USD at 1.1500 is 3.87% below consensus Mar26 target of 1.1800; PMIs could trigger mean reversion or further drift.
- 02BofA and Barclays are the most bearish among our coverage, with Mar26 targets at 1.1700.
- 03A below-consensus PMI print would reinforce the bearish case and could push EUR/USD toward the 1.1400 support.
- 04Goldman's Dec26 target of 1.2500 is the most bullish, betting on a recovery that PMIs could undermine.
Market implications
Watch the 1.1400 level as immediate support if PMIs miss; a beat could lift EUR/USD toward 1.1600. Given the consensus divergence, positioning for a break of 1.1500 may offer asymmetric risk. Our median Mar26 target of 1.1800 serves as a medium-term anchor.
Risks to this view
A strong PMI surprise above 50 in both manufacturing and services could invalidate the bearish view and trigger short covering. Conversely, a collapse below 45 in the German manufacturing PMI would confirm recession fears and accelerate euro selling.
Sentiment by currency
USD~EUR~JPY~GBP~Composite USD score: +0.00
Sources & References
How we cover this story
Other coverage on this pair
EUR/USD strengthens as mixed US labor data and hopes for a US-Iran deal pressure the Greenback.
Soft US labor print reduces Fed rate-hike conviction; geopolitical risk-off from Iran talks risk-off flows weaken USD safe-haven demand.
EUR/USD: Recovery eyes full retracement – Scotiabank
EUR/USD recovery momentum suggests technicians are positioning for mean reversion toward recent highs, indicating potential USD weakness into resistance.
EUR/USD: Binary path around Gulf deal – ING
EUR/USD: Oil shock, real rates and conflict risks – Commerzbank
Oil shock transmission via real rates and geopolitical premium widens USD carry advantage; EUR structural support erodes as terminal rates diverge.
Cross-firm research
EUR/USD Trades 3.87% Below Consensus: What the Gap Reveals
EUR/USD spot at 1.1727 sits 3.87% below the eight-firm median Dec-26 target of 1.22, exposing a structural divergence that demands explanation.
EUR/USD Consensus at 1.22 While Spot Sits 3.87% Below
Eight sell-side firms hold a median Dec-26 target of 1.22 for EUR/USD while spot trades at 1.1727, a gap that demands explanation.