Euro falls to lowest level versus dollar since August
March 13, 2026 at 7:33 AM UTC • Updated March 13, 2026 at 8:10 AM UTC
The euro slid as much as 0.6% to $1.1446 on March 13, 2026, marking its weakest level in more than seven months. The move came amid broad gains for the US dollar as the Middle East war escalated. The euro is down more than 2% year-to-date, with rising energy prices cited as a key headwind for the euro area economy.
Key data points
- Intraday move: -0.6% to $1.1446
- Timeframe: weakest since August (more than seven months)
- Year-to-date performance: down >2%
- Immediate drivers: US dollar strength and escalation of conflict in the Middle East
- Macro pressure: soaring energy costs threatening European growth
Market context and implications
A stronger US dollar tends to weigh on EUR/USD exchange rates; the intraday 0.6% decline to $1.1446 is consistent with broad dollar appreciation across financial markets. For professional traders and institutional investors, a euro below the mid-$1.14 range increases the cost of euro-denominated imports and can amplify inflationary pressure in the euro area when energy prices are elevated.
Traders should note the combination of geopolitical risk (Middle East war escalation) and commodity-driven cost pressures (soaring energy prices) as reinforcing near-term downside risks for the euro. Risk management strategies for EUR/USD positions should account for higher volatility and potential spillovers into European fixed income and equity markets.
Tickers and market references
- FX pair: EUR/USD at $1.1446
- Related tickers: AM, US
Summary takeaways
- The euro hit $1.1446, its lowest since August, after a 0.6% intraday fall.
- Broad US dollar gains and an escalation of the Middle East war were the immediate catalysts.
- The euro’s more-than-2% YTD decline is exacerbated by rising energy prices that threaten European economic momentum.
This concise, data-driven snapshot is intended for traders, analysts and institutional investors monitoring FX volatility, geopolitical risk, and energy-driven macro stress on the euro area.
