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Wall Street Banks Predict Euro Surge Beyond $1.20 Imminently

Wall Street Banks Predict Euro Surge Beyond $1.20 Imminently

Published:
2025-09-27 12:00:57
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Wall Street banks expect the euro to climb past $1.20 soon

Wall Street's biggest players are placing bullish bets on the euro's trajectory.

Currency Strategists See Breakout

Major financial institutions project the European currency will smash through the $1.20 barrier in coming sessions. Trading desks report positioning for what could be the strongest euro performance this quarter.

Institutional Momentum Builds

Hedge funds and asset managers are accumulating euro positions ahead of expected macroeconomic shifts. The consensus forming among top analysts suggests traditional forex markets might finally be waking up to realities crypto traders recognized years ago.

Meanwhile, blockchain-native assets continue operating on internet time while traditional finance still debates currency movements that would be considered glacial in digital asset markets—but hey, at least they're trying.

Pension funds raise hedging bets as interest gap narrows

Peter Schaffrik, global macro strategist at RBC Capital Markets, said the massive repositioning away from the dollar is still in its early stages. “We’ve just seen the tip of the iceberg,” he said. “That’s at the helm of the dollar weakness we’ve seen, and there’s more to come.”

The surge in demand for the euro is being driven by investors using contracts to hedge their dollar exposure, and the movement has gained speed as big institutions, especially pension funds, start to ramp up those hedges from very low levels.

The cost of those hedges depends heavily on the interest rate difference between the U.S. and the Eurozone. With the Fed continuing to lower rates, that gap is narrowing.

Jackie Bowie, who leads Europe, the Middle East, and Africa at Chatham Financial, said, “As that interest rate differential closes, [hedging] potentially becomes more palatable to put in place.” When holding dollars becomes less profitable, hedging makes more sense, and that’s fueling more buying of the euro.

Forecasts are bullish. Goldman Sachs thinks the euro could hit $1.25 within a year. JPMorgan is aiming for $1.22 by March. UBS is calling for $1.23 before the end of this year. A survey compiled by Bloomberg shows most banks expect the currency to push past $1.20 by the third quarter of next year.

But that kind of appreciation isn’t without consequences. Stronger currencies hurt exporters, and Europe’s manufacturers are already feeling the squeeze. They’ve warned that a prolonged rally WOULD cut deep into their profits.

Rising euro raises concern inside the ECB and among exporters

Inside the European Central Bank, the conversation is getting complicated. Tomasz Wieladek, chief European macro strategist at T Rowe Price, called $1.20 a “line in the sand.”

Luis de Guindos, who sits on the ECB’s rate-setting committee, warned back in July that anything above $1.20 would make things “much more complicated.”

The concern isn’t just about exports. A stronger euro puts downward pressure on inflation, which could force the ECB to consider cutting rates just to cool the currency down.

Not everyone inside the central bank is on edge, though. Dominic Bunning, who heads G10 FX strategy at Nomura, said a slow climb in the euro wouldn’t trigger alarm bells. He argued that if domestic demand stays strong, the appreciation could actually help by easing inflation pressures.

But he also made it clear that if the euro jumps too fast while demand weakens, “currency strength [would be] exacerbating disinflationary tendencies.”

Some banks are betting in the other direction. Citi, for example, expects the euro to drop toward $1.10 in the next 6 to 12 months. They say signs of a rebound in the U.S. economy could reverse recent trends. But most analysts aren’t buying it.

Instead, they’re pointing to what they see as a deeper change. A June survey from OMFIF, a think-tank focused on central banking, found that reserve currency managers plan to increase their euro holdings over the next couple of years.

Wieladek called it a structural move. “Euro appreciation is a structural story, as reserve currency managers begin to pivot out of the US and the Fed cuts rates,” he said. For now, Wall Street’s bets are clear.

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