Euro Holds at Mid-January Lows
2026-03-03 10:22
By
Joana Ferreira
1 min. read
The euro held earlier losses, trading around $1.16, its weakest level since mid-January, as the US dollar strengthened on safe-haven demand amid a sharp escalation in the Middle East conflict, despite stronger-than-expected Eurozone inflation data.
US President Donald Trump said the military campaign against Iran could last four to five weeks but emphasized that US forces are prepared to extend operations if needed.
Meanwhile, higher energy costs following the formal closure of the Strait of Hormuz and the ongoing halt of Qatari LNG exports are expected to intensify inflationary pressures across Europe, potentially prompting the ECB to adopt a more hawkish monetary policy stance.
Eurozone February data showed annual inflation unexpectedly at 1.9% and core inflation at 2.4%, both above forecasts.
Traders are now pricing in roughly a 40% probability of an ECB rate hike by year-end, a sharp reversal from late last week when markets assigned a similar likelihood to a rate cut.