We use cookies to understand how you use our site and to improve your experience. This includes personalizing content and advertising. To learn more, click here. By continuing to use our site, you accept our use of cookies, revised Privacy Policy and Terms of Service.
You are being directed to ZacksTrade, a division of LBMZ Securities and licensed broker-dealer. ZacksTrade and Zacks.com are separate companies. The web link between the two companies is not a solicitation or offer to invest in a particular security or type of security. ZacksTrade does not endorse or adopt any particular investment strategy, any analyst opinion/rating/report or any approach to evaluating individual securities.
If you wish to go to ZacksTrade, click OK. If you do not, click Cancel.
The euro has been on a tear lately, being at a two-year high against the greenback last week. Heightened speculation over the European Central Bank’s (ECB) possible announcement of the QE wind down as soon as in early September was behind this strength.
Though the ECB hinted in its latest meeting that “monetary stimulus will be needed for a very long time and bond tapering will be glacially slow,” traders overlooked the dovish tone and kept betting on the euro. Meanwhile, the dollar plunged to an 11-month low on a report that the U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller was probing into transactions related to President Trump and some of his advisers (read: ECB to Wind Up QE Soon? ETFs in Focus).
The dual effect made the euro sizzle against the U.S. dollar. In the last five days (as of July 21, 2017), CurrencyShares Euro ETF (FXE - Free Report) was up about 1.7% while the greenback ETF PowerShares DB US Dollar Bullish ETF (UUP - Free Report) lost about 1.2%.
Other Factors Behind Upbeat Euro
The Euro zone saw a strong start to the year thanks to economic improvement and upbeat corporate earnings. The economy grew 0.6% sequentially in Q1 of 2017, better than the second estimate of 0.5% and following 0.5% growth in the previous period (read: How to Trade Strengthening Euro Zone Economy via ETFs).
The growth also marked the strongest economic expansion rate since the first quarter of 2015, helped by fixed investment and household consumption. Apart from this, political upheaval has been ebbing with the Netherlands and France elections discarding populism. Pro-growth election win in these areas and hopes of a favorable deal in Brexit have buoyed the currency lately (read: French Election Soothes Sentiments: ETFs Likely to Benefit).
Will Euro Surge Further?
With lesser chances of the President’s success in pushing through his pro-growth pledges given the unsuccessful health care reform, Trump trade is likely to take a backseat in the U.S. Plus, overvaluation concerns in U.S. stocks and some weaker-than-expected economic data led U.S. Treasury yields to remain subdued in recent sessions. If nothing pro-growth happens in the U.S., the euro will likely have more room to run (read: Why & How to Trade the Soaring Euro with ETFs).
If the situation persists in the near term, the following ETF investing areas may gain or lose.
ETF Winners
There are ETFs like FXE and Ultra Euro ETF ULEto go long on Euro. While the investment objective of FXE is to reflect the price of the euro in U.S. dollar, ULE measures twice the U.S. dollar price of the euro.
ETF Losers
The euro’s strength doesn’t bode well for several European equities as it may ruin companies’ export competitiveness. As a result, most of the European equities’ ETFs lost in recent sessions, with currency-hedged products witnessing maximum deterioration. Below we highlight a few.
iShares Currency Hedged MSCI Germany ETF
The German DAX index retreated 1.7% on July 21 to record its worst session since June 29. German companies like BMW and Siemens dropped 2.6% and 1.8%, respectively, on July 21. As a result, the currency-hedged Germany ETF shed about 1.5% on July 21 while regular Germany ETF iShares MSCI Germany ETF (EWG - Free Report) declined over 1.1%.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 index shed about 1% on July 21. The fund EZU, which tracks stocks from 11 countries that use the Euro as their official currency, declined about 0.8% on July 21.
Image: Bigstock
Euro at 2-Year High: ETF Winners & Losers
The euro has been on a tear lately, being at a two-year high against the greenback last week. Heightened speculation over the European Central Bank’s (ECB) possible announcement of the QE wind down as soon as in early September was behind this strength.
Though the ECB hinted in its latest meeting that “monetary stimulus will be needed for a very long time and bond tapering will be glacially slow,” traders overlooked the dovish tone and kept betting on the euro. Meanwhile, the dollar plunged to an 11-month low on a report that the U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller was probing into transactions related to President Trump and some of his advisers (read: ECB to Wind Up QE Soon? ETFs in Focus).
The dual effect made the euro sizzle against the U.S. dollar. In the last five days (as of July 21, 2017), CurrencyShares Euro ETF (FXE - Free Report) was up about 1.7% while the greenback ETF PowerShares DB US Dollar Bullish ETF (UUP - Free Report) lost about 1.2%.
Other Factors Behind Upbeat Euro
The Euro zone saw a strong start to the year thanks to economic improvement and upbeat corporate earnings. The economy grew 0.6% sequentially in Q1 of 2017, better than the second estimate of 0.5% and following 0.5% growth in the previous period (read: How to Trade Strengthening Euro Zone Economy via ETFs).
The growth also marked the strongest economic expansion rate since the first quarter of 2015, helped by fixed investment and household consumption. Apart from this, political upheaval has been ebbing with the Netherlands and France elections discarding populism. Pro-growth election win in these areas and hopes of a favorable deal in Brexit have buoyed the currency lately (read: French Election Soothes Sentiments: ETFs Likely to Benefit).
Will Euro Surge Further?
With lesser chances of the President’s success in pushing through his pro-growth pledges given the unsuccessful health care reform, Trump trade is likely to take a backseat in the U.S. Plus, overvaluation concerns in U.S. stocks and some weaker-than-expected economic data led U.S. Treasury yields to remain subdued in recent sessions. If nothing pro-growth happens in the U.S., the euro will likely have more room to run (read: Why & How to Trade the Soaring Euro with ETFs).
If the situation persists in the near term, the following ETF investing areas may gain or lose.
ETF Winners
There are ETFs like FXE and Ultra Euro ETF ULE to go long on Euro. While the investment objective of FXE is to reflect the price of the euro in U.S. dollar, ULE measures twice the U.S. dollar price of the euro.
ETF Losers
The euro’s strength doesn’t bode well for several European equities as it may ruin companies’ export competitiveness. As a result, most of the European equities’ ETFs lost in recent sessions, with currency-hedged products witnessing maximum deterioration. Below we highlight a few.
iShares Currency Hedged MSCI Germany ETF
The German DAX index retreated 1.7% on July 21 to record its worst session since June 29. German companies like BMW and Siemens dropped 2.6% and 1.8%, respectively, on July 21. As a result, the currency-hedged Germany ETF shed about 1.5% on July 21 while regular Germany ETF iShares MSCI Germany ETF (EWG - Free Report) declined over 1.1%.
iShares MSCI EMU ETF (EZU - Free Report)
The pan-European Stoxx 600 index shed about 1% on July 21. The fund EZU, which tracks stocks from 11 countries that use the Euro as their official currency, declined about 0.8% on July 21.
iShares MSCI France ETF (EWQ - Free Report)
The French CAC 40 index slumped 1.6%, registering its biggest drop since April 18, as per CNBC. The fund lost over 0.7% on July 21.
Want key ETF info delivered straight to your inbox?
Zacks’ free Fund Newsletter will brief you on top news and analysis, as well as top-performing ETFs, each week. Get it free >>