[DAILY TRADING] EURUSD 13 May 2026 — Hot CPI, 3-Pip Reaction. The Dollar Has a Problem.
EURUSD moved 3 pips after April CPI printed 3.8% year-on-year yesterday, above the 3.7% consensus, the highest reading since May 2023.[1] Core CPI printed 2.8%, also above the 2.7% forecast.[2] The pair sits at 1.17375 as of 02:31 UTC on 13 May 2026.[3]
That is the story for today’s session. Not the inflation number but the reaction to it.
In a normal playbook, a CPI beat of this size, with core also above consensus, would support the dollar. It did not. When a currency stops responding to data that should move it, the structural forces underneath are usually more powerful than any individual release.
All prices are as of 02:31 UTC on 13 May 2026. Charts are from TradingView via OANDA and are indicative. This is not financial advice.
Key Points
- April CPI printed 3.8% year-on-year against a 3.7% consensus, the hottest reading since May 2023, and EURUSD dropped just 3 pips in response, closing near where it opened.[1][3]
- The non-reaction matters more than the number: a hot inflation print that fails to move the dollar points to structural selling pressure offsetting any rate-expectations support.
- PPI prints tomorrow, 14 May, is the second half of the inflation picture. A second beat in 24 hours would test whether the market’s muted dollar response holds or finally cracks.
What the Chart Is Showing Right Now
EURUSD is consolidating at 1.17375, sitting in the middle of a range it has held for two weeks. The pair is between two clear zones: 1.1640 below, which held through two separate April pullbacks, and 1.1800 above, the pre-war level it has not reclaimed on a closing basis.
The daily chart tells the recent context quickly. The pair ran from near 1.2040 in late January down to a March low around 1.1417 after the Iran conflict began, then recovered almost the entire move through April. It is now consolidating and yesterday’s CPI print did nothing to change that structure.
The RSI is in the mid-50s, neutral. Volume on the recovery has been declining. The 50-day moving average has flattened. None of those readings changed after the CPI release, which itself tells a story about how little the print shifted positioning.

Why the Dollar Did Not React to Hot CPI
Three structural forces are absorbing what would normally be a dollar-positive inflation beat.
The Fed is already priced for no cuts. CME FedWatch showed zero rate moves priced for all of 2026 going into the CPI print.[4] A beat that confirms the ‘no cuts’ view cannot re-price what is already priced. There was no incremental hawkish surprise for the market to trade.
The inflation source is the war, not the economy. Energy prices jumped 3.8% in April and accounted for more than 40% of the headline monthly gain, with the annual gasoline index up 28.4%.[2] Markets read geopolitical tension-driven energy inflation differently from demand-driven inflation, it raises the cost of living without signalling a stronger economy, which limits the dollar’s upside.
Reserve diversification is an ongoing headwind. Analysts at J.P. Morgan Research noted in early May that diversification away from US assets was weighing on the dollar’s responsiveness to positive data.[5] A single CPI print does not reverse a structural trend of that nature. The analyst reaction roundup on Investing.com noted that with no clear end to the Middle East conflict, the primary inflation catalysts such as energy, gasoline, food, and transportation, are all positioned to move higher in coming months.[6]
Key Levels for Today’s Session
These are the zones being monitored. They are reference levels, not trade signals.
| Pair | Support | Resistance | Current situation |
| EURUSD | 1.1640 / 1.1480 | 1.1800 / 1.1900 | Consolidating at 1.1737, CPI non-reaction confirmed range holds |
Table 1: Key levels as of 02:31 UTC, 13 May 2026. Sources: TradingView, FXStreet, Forex.com. Indicative only.
The 1.1800 area is the immediate level to watch. It was support before the March selloff and the pair has not closed above it since. A session that holds 1.1640 on the downside and tests 1.1800 on the upside would confirm the range is intact post-CPI.
The 1.1900 zone above that carries longer-term structural weight per Forex.com analysis and it capped the pair across 2022–2024.[7] It is not in play today but defines the wider picture traders are mapping.
What to Watch in This Session and Tomorrow
PPI — 14 May is the next live event. Back-to-back with CPI, it completes the inflation picture. If PPI also beats consensus, traders will be watching whether the dollar’s muted response to yesterday’s CPI holds or whether two consecutive beats start to shift positioning. A miss on PPI would reinforce the ‘structural dollar weakness’ read.
The non-reaction itself is worth monitoring through today’s session. If EURUSD drifts back toward 1.1640 despite the hot CPI print already in the market, it suggests sellers are present at these levels. If the pair holds 1.1700–1.1740 and starts pressing 1.1800, the non-reaction to CPI is doing the work instead.
Strait of Hormuz remains the tail risk. Any credible signal of de-escalation would relieve the energy-driven inflation pressure and potentially reopen the rate-cut conversation that the CPI data is currently keeping closed.
On risk management: leverage amplifies moves in both directions equally, a range that has held for two weeks can break sharply on a PPI surprise. Stop Loss placement around the 1.1640 support and 1.1800 resistance is worth reviewing before the European session opens. Position sizing relative to account equity matters especially when a second consecutive inflation print is due within 24 hours.
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References
[1] “CPI inflation April 2026: Prices rose 3.8% annually — CNBC” https://www.cnbc.com/2026/05/12/cpi-inflation-april-2026-.html Accessed on 13 May 2026.
[2] “Consumer Price Index Summary April 2026 — U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics” https://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htm Accessed on 13 May 2026.
[3] “US core CPI rises 2.8% in April 2026 surpassing expectations — AimsFX” https://aimsfx.com/2026/05/12/us-core-cpi-rises-2-8-percent-in-april-2026-surpassing-expectations/ Accessed on 13 May 2026.
[4] “CME FedWatch Tool — CME Group” https://www.cmegroup.com/markets/interest-rates/cme-fedwatch-tool.html Accessed on 13 May 2026.
[5] “Dollar demand and reserve diversification — J.P. Morgan Research” https://www.jpmorgan.com/insights/research Accessed on 13 May 2026.
[6] “Reaction roundup: Experts weigh in on hot April CPI report — Investing.com” https://www.investing.com/news/economy-news/reaction-roundup-experts-analysts-weigh-in-on-hot-april-cpi-report-4681555 Accessed on 13 May 2026.
[7] “EURUSD outlook: key levels defining 2026 trends — Forex.com” https://www.forex.com/en-us/news-and-analysis/eurusd-outlook-key-levels-defining-2026-trends/ Accessed on 13 May 2026.
[8] “April 2026 CPI Preview — TradingKey” https://www.tradingkey.com/analysis/economic/inflation/261883256-april-2026-cpi-preview-tradingkey Accessed on 13 May 2026.
[9] “EURUSD technical analysis and outlook — FXStreet” https://www.fxstreet.com/currencies/eurusd Accessed on 13 May 2026.