Euro Rebounds on Iran War Optimism
2026-04-01 06:43
By
Joana Ferreira
1 min. read
The euro strengthened in early April, climbing to $1.16 and distancing itself from the seven-month lows recorded in mid-March, following US President Donald Trump’s statement that the US could withdraw from Iran within "two or three weeks," regardless of whether a deal with Tehran is reached.
The rebound came after a turbulent March, during which the euro lost 2.2% against the USD, its worst monthly performance since July 2025, amid escalating Middle East tensions.
However, the Strait of Hormuz crisis remains unresolved, with the effective closure of the critical waterway continuing to disrupt oil supplies and drive prices upward.
Ongoing uncertainty and rising inflation concerns have prompted markets to reassess expectations for the European Central Bank’s policy path.
Investors now anticipate two interest rate hikes in 2026, down from projections of three hikes earlier this week.
Before the war, investors had anticipated no hikes in 2026, with a slight chance of monetary easing.