Abstract:As traders position for the medium term, a consensus is building among major investment banks that EUR/USD is poised for a structural bull run, potentially targeting the 1.20-1.25 range by 2026. The forecast is predicated on a convergence of transatlantic monetary policy and a rotation of global capital away from US assets.

As traders position for the medium term, a consensus is building among major investment banks that EUR/USD is poised for a structural bull run, potentially targeting the 1.20-1.25 range by 2026. The forecast is predicated on a convergence of transatlantic monetary policy and a rotation of global capital away from US assets.
The Macro Pivot
The driver for a weaker Dollar is the erosion of the “US exceptionalism” trade. With the Federal Reserve expected to cut rates towards a neutral range of 2.75%-3.00% by mid-2026, the real yield advantage that bolstered the Greenback from 2022 to 2024 is evaporating.
- Goldman Sachs projects 1.25, citing a diversification of global equity portfolios out of expensive US tech and into undervalued European markets.
- Deutsche Bank aligns with the 1.25 target, emphasizing that a recovery in Asian currencies (CNY/JPY) will act as a force multiplier for broad Dollar weakness.
Structural Headwinds in Energy Trade
However, friction in real-economy trade remains a risk. Recent data shows the EU is struggling to meet its ambitious $750 billion energy purchase commitments from the US.
- LNG Shortfall: EU imports of US LNG have not met targets due to falling prices and infrastructure bottlenecks.
- Implication: If the EU fails to balance trade through energy purchases, trade tensions could resurface under a protectionist US administration, weighing on the Euro.
Technical Landscape
Technically, the Euro is showing signs of a long-term bottom. The pair has reclaimed its 200-day moving average and established higher lows on weekly charts. A sustained break above 1.19 would confirm the end of the secular bear trend, opening the door for the predicted run to 1.25. Risks to this outlook include an unexpected re-acceleration of US inflation or renewed political instability in France.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.