Role Of Undervalued Asian Currencies
Undervalued Asian currencies can push the trade-weighted Euro higher. The Renminbi (RMB) and Taiwan Dollar (TWD) make up about 17% of the ECB’s trade-weighted basket. Because RMB and TWD are described as severely undervalued, they mechanically lift the trade-weighted Euro. The estimate given is that they make the Euro about 5% stronger than it would be if those currencies were not undervalued. Without this effect, the trade-weighted Euro would still be at the upper end of its 25-year range. It would be less strong than the current index level implies. As of March 6th, 2026, we are still dealing with the same puzzle from 2025 where the Euro appears weak against the US dollar but strong on a trade-weighted basis. This creates a confusing picture, as the headline EUR/USD rate, currently hovering around 1.0750, doesn’t tell the whole story about the Euro’s overall standing. The core of this issue remains the significant undervaluation of key Asian currencies.Trading And Policy Implications
The Chinese Renminbi and Taiwan Dollar continue to weigh on the index, artificially inflating the Euro’s trade-weighted value. We’ve seen China’s central bank continue its policy of managed depreciation to support its exports, with industrial output figures from February 2026 showing only a modest 3.2% year-over-year increase, below expectations. This sustained weakness in Asian currencies keeps the trade-weighted Euro elevated, even as the EUR/USD pair struggles. This distortion is critical because it gives the European Central Bank policy flexibility. With the trade-weighted index still historically high, the ECB has less pressure to combat a “weak” currency, which helps them maintain a dovish stance, especially as recent Eurozone inflation cooled to 2.2% in February. We recall discussions from last year about this exact dynamic, and it appears to be guiding their inaction on rate hikes. In contrast, the US economy continues to show resilience, with the latest non-farm payroll report for February 2026 adding a solid 230,000 jobs and keeping the Federal Reserve on a much more hawkish path. This growing policy divergence between a hesitant ECB and a firm Fed is the primary driver reinforcing US dollar strength. History, such as the period from 2014-2015, shows us that such policy divergences can lead to sustained trends in currency pairs. For derivatives traders, this points towards strategies that benefit from a declining EUR/USD. Buying put options on the Euro, or establishing bearish put spreads to lower the cost, allows for positioning for further downside while capping risk. Given the policy divergence, targeting levels seen in late 2025, such as the 1.0500 handle, seems like a reasonable medium-term objective. The discrepancy also suggests that implied volatility in EUR/USD may be underpriced, as the market could be lulled by the strong trade-weighted index. Volatility-based trades, like purchasing long-dated straddles or strangles, could be effective to position for a sharp move once the market focuses solely on the diverging central bank policies. This sets up a potential break from the range-bound trading we have seen in early 2026. This environment is also ripe for relative value trades that isolate the US dollar’s strength. One could consider shorting the EUR/USD pair while simultaneously taking a long position in the Euro against a currency whose central bank is even more dovish than the ECB. This approach looks to profit from the unique strength of the dollar rather than broad weakness in the Euro itself. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.
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