EUR/USD softened to 1.1621 on November 19, 2025, marking a 0.06% decline from prior sessions as the euro cedes ground to a resilient U.S. dollar buoyed by hawkish Federal Reserve undertones and mixed U.S. data tempering aggressive rate-cut bets. This pullback—down 0.48% monthly yet up 9.22% yearly—highlights eurozone vulnerabilities, with September’s €19.4 billion trade surplus offering fleeting support amid ECB’s steady 2.00% deposit rate. As DXY clings above 102, the pair’s softening trajectory eyes 1.1580 support, per Trading Economics, underscoring transatlantic policy divergence in a tariff-thawed landscape.
Eurozone tailwinds falter: Germany’s Q3 GDP held at +0.3%, yet core inflation’s sticky 2.4% justifies ECB President Lagarde’s pause post-five cuts, contrasting Fed’s 4.75% hold with just 40% December cut odds. U.S. contrasts bite: ADP payrolls dipped 2,500 weekly, signaling labor softening, yet CPI at 2.3% caps easing, widening yield gaps as 10-year Treasuries yield 4.1% versus bunds at 1.9%. Trade pact extensions mitigate drags, but geopolitical Eastern Europe frictions amplify euro’s liquidity premium erosion.
From charts, EUR/USD‘s retreat etches a descending wedge from October’s 1.1778 peak, RSI at 58 neutral-downward amid 24% euro volumes. Support at 1.1582—50-day EMA—resistance at 1.1609 tests 100-day EMA. Sub-1.1550 risks 1.1500 Fib, but surplus beats target 1.1700. Volatility at 9.5% awaits December 12 ECB.
This softening ripples to STOXX 600 flat on exporters, hedging peripherals. For yield hunters, it unveils euro bonds’ tempered allure. Heading into 2026, EUR/USD narrates caution: euro capitulation versus dollar dominance. Monitor November 21 CPI—dovish hints could stem at 1.1650, etching resilience as euro’s rebound riddle.






