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The announcement of a two-week ceasefire in Iran triggered a relief rally during Wednesday’s Asian trading session that sent the safe-haven US Dollar (USD) tumbling against its main peers. The EUR/USD extended its rally from 1.1500 to hit five-week highs at 1.1697 so far.

Investors have celebrated a last-minute agreement between Washington and Tehran to cease the hostilities for two weeks and temporarily reopen the Strait of Hormuz. US President Donald Trump had threatened to kill an entire civilisation if the authorities of the Islamic Republic failed to open the critical gateway before Tuesday at 8 PM Easter Time (00:00 GMT on Wednesday).

The situation remains extremely volatile, and news from the region is likely to keep driving markets. Nevertheless, investors are likely to pay more attention to macroeconomic data.

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In Europe, German Factory orders have shown a 0.9% rebound in February, following an 11.1% decline in January, but short of the market expectations of a 2% increment. Later on the day March Producer Price Index  (PPI) is likely to provide further insight about the impact of the energy shock on the Eurozone productive sector. Eurozone Retail Sales are also out on Wednesday, but they predate Iran’s war, and therefore, their impact is likely to be limited.

In the US, the main focus will be on the minutes of the Federal Reserve (Fed) March’s March meeting to assess the path of the central bank’s next monetary policy decisions.

Technical Analysis: Bulls aiming for 1.1700 and higher

EUR/USD trades at 1.1690 amid a cautiously bullish near-term bias. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) has reached overbought levels, but downside attempts are finding buyers so far. The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) line has turned positive and stands above its signal with an expanding histogram, which reinforces building buying pressure.

Bulls have been capped a few pips below 1.1700, yet price action stands comfortably above the previous range top, at 1.1670. Further up, the next targets might be the February 19 and 20 lows, in the 1.1740 area, and the February 26 and 27 highs, around 1.1825.

On the downside, a bearish reaction below March 10 highs near 1.1670 would target the 1.1630-1.1640 area (March 23, 25, and April 1 highs). A reversal to Tuesday’s lows at 1.1525 seems off the cards right now.

(The technical analysis of this story was written with the help of an AI tool.)

Economic Indicator

Factory Orders s.a. (MoM)

The Factory orders released by the Deutsche Bundesbank is an indicator that includes shipments, inventories, and new and unfilled orders. An increase in the factory order total may indicate an expansion in the German economy and could be an inflationary factor. It is worth noting that the German Factory barely influences, either positively or negatively, the total Eurozone GDP. A high reading is positive (or bullish) for the EUR, while a low reading is negative.


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Economic Indicator

Producer Price Index (YoY)

The Producer Price Index (PPI) released by the Eurostat is an index that measures the change in prices received by domestic producers of commodities in all stages of processing (crude materials, intermediate materials, and finished goods). Generally, a high reading is seen positive (or bullish) for the EUR, while a low reading is seen as negative (or bearish).


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Next release:
Wed Apr 08, 2026 09:00

Frequency:
Monthly

Consensus:
-3%

Previous:
-2.1%

Source:

Eurostat

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