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← Coverage stream27 Apr 2026, 20:32 UTC
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EUR/USD edges higher above 1.1700 as Fed and ECB decisions loom amid US-Iran standoff

EUR/USD edged higher above 1.1700 as markets brace for Fed and ECB policy decisions, with the US-Iran standoff adding a geopolitical risk layer. The pair's modest gain reflects positioning adjustments ahead of the central bank meetings, though the broader trend remains subdued as spot trades 3.87% below our Q2 2026 consensus of 1.2050. The headline's focus on the 1.1700 level aligns with the lower end of our firm targets, highlighting the divergence between near-term price action and medium-term bullish forecasts. This gap underpins our view that EUR/USD upside is conditional on a dovish Fed pivot or de-escalation in Middle East tensions.

Where it sits in our coverage

Our consensus EUR/USD target for Q1 2026 sits at 1.1800 (median across 8 firms), with Morgan Stanley at the upper bound (1.2000) and BofA at the lower (1.1700). The headline's reference to 1.1700 aligns closely with BofA and Barclays, both of which share the most bearish near-term outlook. The consensus spread widens through 2026: the median for year-end stands at 1.2200, with Goldman and Deutsche Bank at the bullish extreme (1.2500) and Morgan Stanley surprisingly bearish at 1.1600.

How firms align

Firms with bullish leanings — Goldman, Morgan Stanley (near-term), and ING — all target 1.1900-1.2000 for Q1, supporting the notion of a bounce from current levels. However, the headline's cautious tone is echoed by BofA and Barclays, whose 1.1700 Q1 targets match the figure cited. Our published research on EUR/USD consensus divergence highlights this tension: spot at 1.1500 sits well below the median of 1.2200 for December 2026, suggesting significant upside if forecasts materialize.

What the data shows

Our analysis shows that 6 of 8 firms maintain targets above 1.1800 for Q1 2026, indicating a broad consensus for near-term appreciation despite current headwinds. The most notable outlier is Morgan Stanley, which flips from bullish near-term (1.2000 for Q1) to bearish by year-end (1.1600), projecting a reversal. This asymmetry in forecasts underscores the risk of a policy surprise, as flagged in our research piece /research/eurusd-consensus-divergence-may-2026.

How firms align with this view

consensus1.1800range1.17001.2000

Aligned with the headline view

Contrary positioning

Key takeaways

  • 01EUR/USD at 1.1700 aligns with BofA and Barclays' Q1 targets, while consensus sees upside to 1.1800.
  • 02Fed and ECB decisions this week are key catalysts; a dovish Fed could drive a break above 1.1700.
  • 03US-Iran tensions add downside risk; escalation could cap euro gains despite central bank support.
  • 04Morgan Stanley's year-end target of 1.1600 stands out as a contrarian call among bullish consensus.

Market implications

Focus shifts to the Fed decision ended September 18: a hawkish hold could pressure EUR/USD back to 1.1650 support, while a dovish surprise may trigger a rally toward our Q1 consensus of 1.1800. The ECB meeting on September 12 also matters; any signal of further easing would cap the pair. Watch the 1.1700 level as a pivot — a sustained break above could accelerate to 1.1800, while a fall below 1.1650 would test year-to-date lows.

Risks to this view

This view would be invalidated if the Fed delivers a hawkish surprise (e.g., signalling one more hike), which would strengthen the dollar and push EUR/USD below 1.1500. Similarly, a sharp escalation of the US-Iran conflict could trigger a risk-off move, benefiting the dollar over the euro. Upward risk: if both the Fed and ECB sound dovish, EUR/USD could break above 1.2000, targeting the Goldman and ING Q1 forecasts.

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.

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