FX | Friday 22 May 2026
EUR/USD: Slight Pullback but the Dollar Ceiling Is Still There
Thursday close: 1.1617 | Daily change: -0.07% | Bias: Neutral with Upside Watch
Current Read
The euro slipped seven basis points on Thursday. That is not a pullback, that is a rest. EUR/USD has been trading in a tight band between roughly 1.1580 and 1.1680 for the better part of a fortnight, and neither party to this stalemate has found a reason to break the deadlock. On both sides of the equation, the policy story is effectively on pause.
The European Central Bank has signalled that additional rate cuts remain on the table through summer, but the pace has slowed. On the other side, US Federal Reserve commentary has remained cautious, with officials unwilling to commit to cuts until inflation data cooperates more convincingly. That shared ambiguity creates a low-volatility FX environment, which is exactly what we are seeing in this pair.
At 1.1617, the euro is holding ground well above the critical 1.1400 level that marked the line between a healthy correction and a shift in the broader trend. The macro backdrop, with European growth data surprising to the upside in recent weeks, has provided a floor that sellers cannot comfortably trade through.
Key Levels
What Changed Thursday
Thursday’s slight dollar bid came through across most major pairs, not just EUR/USD. That points to a broad dollar move rather than any specific euro weakness. The US PMI data released during the New York morning session came in marginally stronger than forecast, giving the dollar a small boost that faded through the afternoon but was enough to close the pair seven pips lower.
Eurozone-specific newsflow was quiet. There were no major ECB speakers scheduled, and the German industrial output figures from earlier in the week had already been digested. The euro is essentially a passenger on this pair at present, with the dollar in the driving seat.
Friday Scenarios
Bull Case
A recovery through 1.1650 during the London session, with DXY failing to hold above 99.50. If risk sentiment holds stable and there is no US data shock, the path of least resistance points toward retesting the 1.1680 zone. A break above 1.1700 would be the week’s most significant development and would signal a run toward 1.1750.
Base Case
More of the same. The pair drifts between 1.1590 and 1.1650 through a low-volume Friday session. No catalyst, no commitment, and traders square their books ahead of the weekend. This outcome changes nothing about the medium-term picture.
Bear Case
A clean break below 1.1580 targets 1.1540, and if that fails, 1.1500 comes into play. The trigger would need to be a meaningful dollar catalyst, whether that is hawkish Fed commentary, a strong US data print, or risk-off positioning driving dollar demand. Below 1.1500, the short-term bullish thesis is under genuine pressure.
Sizing and Approach
EUR/USD is the most liquid FX pair in the world, so Friday slippage risks are lower here than in many other instruments. That said, this pair has been in compression for two weeks. Breakout traps are common in this environment, where price pushes through a level, triggers stops, then reverses sharply. Be careful chasing moves above 1.1680 or below 1.1580 without confirming the move holds for at least one hourly close.
Standard sizing is appropriate here, but targeting range edges rather than breakouts is the lower-risk strategy for a Friday in a compressed market.
Cross-References
- DXY: As always, the primary driver. A sustained move above 99.50 in the dollar index puts 1.1580 support under real pressure.
- GBP/USD: Sterling moving in the same direction confirms it is a dollar story. Divergence between the two would indicate currency-specific factors at play.
- Gold: EUR/USD and gold tend to move together when dollar is the variable. Gold holding above $4,500 is supportive of the euro.
- USD/JPY: If USD/JPY starts reversing from the 159 zone, that would represent broad dollar weakness and would benefit EUR/USD.