Escalating Middle East conflict boosts risk aversion, lifting the dollar and pushing EUR/USD beneath 1.1600

    by VT Markets
    /
    Mar 24, 2026
    EUR/USD fell below 1.1600 after small gains, trading near 1.1590 in Asian hours on Tuesday. The move came as the US Dollar strengthened amid higher risk aversion linked to the Middle East conflict. The Guardian reported that Israel launched a new wave of strikes on Tehran. US President Donald Trump indicated a pause in US attacks on energy infrastructure after talks with Iran, while Israel said operations would continue under government directives.

    Geopolitical Escalation Drives Risk Aversion

    Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said there was “no dialogue” with Washington. Parliamentary Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said “no negotiations have been held with the US”, and adviser Mohsen Rezaei said the war would continue until Iran receives full compensation for damage. Reuters reported that San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said the next interest-rate move is unclear unless the conflict ends quickly and oil-price rises prove temporary. Rising oil prices have added to inflation concerns and influenced expectations around central-bank policy. The ECB kept rates unchanged last week and cited a “significantly more uncertain” outlook due to the Iran conflict. In 2022, the Euro accounted for 31% of FX transactions, with average daily turnover above $2.2 trillion; EUR/USD is about 30% of trades, with EUR/JPY 4%, EUR/GBP 3%, and EUR/AUD 2%. The escalating Middle East conflict is the main driver, pushing capital towards the safety of the US Dollar. We’ve seen the CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) jump to over 25 in the past week, its highest level since the banking jitters we saw in late 2025. This risk-off environment is the primary force weighing on the EUR/USD pair right now. The immediate economic fallout is clear in energy markets, where Brent crude futures have surged past $110 a barrel. This is fueling inflation expectations, with the latest Eurozone Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) for February already ticking up to 2.8%. This puts pressure on the European Central Bank to act, even as the economy slows.

    Positioning For Volatility Across Rates And FX

    For derivative traders, this creates a complex scenario where central bank policies are diverging. While the market is pricing in the possibility of a hawkish ECB to combat inflation, recent German PMI data from last month showed a dip to 48.5, suggesting a manufacturing contraction. The ECB is being forced to consider tightening policy into a weakening economic backdrop. Given this uncertainty, we believe focusing on volatility is more prudent than making large directional bets. Implied volatility on one-month EUR/USD options has increased significantly, indicating the market expects larger price movements. Strategies like long straddles could be positioned to benefit from a significant price swing, regardless of whether it is driven by war fears or a surprise central bank announcement. We can look back at the market’s reaction to the energy shock in 2022 for a potential roadmap. We saw then how the Euro initially weakened due to Europe’s energy vulnerability and general risk aversion. However, the resulting inflation forced the ECB into a more aggressive rate-hiking cycle than the market expected, which eventually provided strong support for the currency later that year. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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