EUR/USD holds near 1.1670 as Fed leaves rates unchanged
EUR/USD holds steady around 1.1670 after the Federal Reserve left rates unchanged, a decision widely expected by markets. The pair remains within its recent range, with the focus now on the ECB's next move and growing divergence in growth outlooks. This status quo keeps the dollar supported by higher yields, but EUR/USD's downside is cushioned by elevated short positioning. The headline reflects a pause, but our analysis highlights persistent structural factors that extend beyond today's non-event.
Where it sits in our coverage
Our consensus EUR/USD target stands at 1.1800 for March 2026 (median across 8 firms), with Morgan Stanley at the upper bound (1.2000) and BofA/Barclays at the lower (1.1700). Fxstreet.com's neutral tone aligns more closely with the center of the consensus, reflecting the view that near-term catalysts are lacking. However, the wide year-end spread (1.2100–1.2500) underscores significant disagreement over the medium-term path.
How firms align
Morgan Stanley stands out with a March 2026 target of 1.2000, the most bullish, while Goldman and Deutsche Bank share a 1.2500 year-end forecast, betting on a sharper EUR recovery. On the contrary, BofA and Barclays remain cautious at 1.1700 for March, aligning with a stronger USD narrative. Neither camp is validated by today's Fed hold, but the headline's steady tone favors the consensus middle.
What the data shows
Our research piece /research/eurusd-consensus-divergence-may-2026 highlights that EUR/USD spot at 1.1500 sits 3.87% below the consensus year-end target of 1.2200, suggesting a significant gap that could close through USD weakness or EUR strength. This divergence implies that while the Fed's pause offers no immediate catalyst, the consensus expects a gradual shift that current pricing does not fully reflect.
How firms align with this view
Aligned with the headline view
Contrary positioning
Key takeaways
- 01Fed's hold leaves EUR/USD range-bound near 1.1670, with no near-term catalyst.
- 02Consensus year-end target of 1.2200 implies 4.5% upside, but spot paths diverge across firms.
- 03Morgan Stanley's bullish 1.2000 Mar26 target contrasts with BofA/Barclays at 1.1700.
- 04Watch ECB guidance next; any dovish tilt could pressure EUR below 1.16.
Market implications
Focus shifts to ECB rhetoric; any hawkish surprise could lift EUR/USD toward our consensus 1.1800 Mar26 target. Near-term support at 1.1600, with resistance at 1.1800. Positioning data will be key to gauge if the consensus bullish view is already crowded.
Risks to this view
A renewed surge in US inflation forcing the Fed to resume hikes would invalidate the muted reaction and could push EUR/USD below 1.1500. Conversely, a sharp economic downturn in the eurozone could escalate ECB easing bets, also weighing on the pair.
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.