(Bloomberg) -- The euro has kicked off the year on a grim note, and hedge funds see it hurtling toward parity with the dollar — if not lower — in the coming months.
Leveraged funds in Europe and the US rolled down their euro options positions on Thursday as the currency dropped to its lowest level since November 2022, traders said. Some 2.5 billion euro options wagers with strikes targeting parity and below changed hands on Thursday — about four times last month’s daily average, according to Bloomberg’s calculations based on Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation data.
The euro has declined about 1.3% this week to trail all but two of its Group-of-10 peers as jitters about Europe’s economic growth outlook and the prospect of more US tariffs rattled investors. Selling momentum may gain traction if the region’s growth prospects weaken further, with the common currency ranking among the most liquid assets to trade.
“Apart from clients rolling in-the-money euro downside trades to three to six months targeting 0.97-1.0 region, we also saw fresh vol intensive structures being initiated in similar tenors,” said Sagar Sambrani, senior FX options trader at Nomura London.
The euro traded at around $1.0294 on Friday, after plummeting over 1% to $1.0226 in the previous session, a level last reached more than two years ago.
The negative sentiment has been building for a while, with hedge funds having held bearish positions on the common currency since late September, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data. Asset managers have also pared bullish bets.
“A breach of parity in EUR/USD now looks likely,” said Derek Halpenny, head of global markets research for EMEA at MUFG. “Tariffs and divergence expectations between the US and the euro-zone could fuel further EUR/USD selling over the coming weeks.”
What Bloomberg Strategists Say...
“EUR/USD’s path below parity is becoming clearer as big option positioning adds to negative momentum in the spot rate.”
Mark Cranfield, Markets Live strategist
Rabobank, Wells Fargo and Investec see potential for the euro to test parity versus the dollar in the second quarter. The key level was last breached in 2022 after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine triggered an energy crisis in Europe and ignited fears of a slowdown.
“Strategically, we stay bearish euro-dollar, targeting parity over the medium term,” Mohamad Al-Saraf, analyst at Danske Bank in Copenhagen, wrote in a note.
However, euro option pricing indicates there may be some funds looking to bet on a near-term rally in the common currency, according to Nomura’s Sambrani. “Interestingly, gamma risk reversals remain fairly offered for EUR puts indicating the market also has interest in short dated momentum reversals,” he said.
Slow stochastics, a momentum indicator, suggests that the euro is in oversold territory versus the dollar.
--With assistance from Tian Chen.
(Updates with Nomura comment in fourth and penultimate paragraphs and MUFG comment in seventh paragraph)
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