Euro Falls to Over One-Month Low
2026-05-15 07:51
By
Joana Ferreira
1 min. read
The euro fell below $1.165, hitting its lowest level since early April and tracking toward a weekly loss of over 1% against the US dollar.
Mounting evidence of economic damage from the Iran war has led investors to expect faster-than-anticipated interest rate hikes and weaker growth.
Oil prices surged after US President Donald Trump’s remark that “we don’t need the Strait of Hormuz open,” heightening concerns that higher energy costs will drive up prices across goods and services, further fueling inflation.
Investors have increased bets on European Central Bank rate hikes, now fully pricing in three increases.
ECB official Martins Kazaks reinforced this view on Thursday, stating that the central bank would need to raise borrowing costs if rising crude prices feed into inflation expectations.