Euro at Two-Month Low on Middle East Tensions
2026-06-08 07:56
By
Joana Ferreira
1 min. read
The euro steadied just above $1.15, close to its weakest level since April 3, as renewed Middle East tensions stoked fears of a prolonged Iran conflict, exacerbating inflation concerns and dampening growth prospects.
Brent crude surged over 4% after Iran and Israel exchanged missile strikes, despite calls from President Trump for both sides to cease hostilities and pursue peace talks.
Investors also braced for a likely European Central Bank rate hike this week, with traders now pricing in three increases for the ECB and fully expecting the first hike as soon as June 11.
This follows data showing euro-area inflation rose to 3.2% in May, its highest in over two and a half years.
However, uncertainty lingers after Eurozone GDP figures were revised to show a contraction in Q1 2026, the first since late 2022 and the steepest since mid-2020.