France’s trade balance for March came in below expectations. The forecast was a deficit of €-5.6B.
The actual trade balance was a deficit of €-6.9B. This indicates the shortfall was larger than expected.
The wider-than-expected French trade deficit for March puts immediate downward pressure on the Euro. This data suggests a weakening in one of the Eurozone’s core economies, prompting us to consider bearish positions. We should be looking at buying put options on the EUR/USD, particularly with strike prices below the key 1.0850 support level.
This single data point adds to a growing narrative that could influence the European Central Bank. With recent data showing Eurozone inflation has cooled to 2.1%, continued economic weakness could increase market bets on a future interest rate cut. Consequently, we are evaluating selling EUR futures contracts in anticipation of this shift in monetary policy sentiment.
The poor trade performance is also a negative signal for French equities, especially for companies heavily reliant on exports. We anticipate the CAC 40 index will underperform its European peers in the coming weeks. A strategy to short CAC 40 futures while going long on the German DAX appears attractive, especially as German factory orders surprisingly rose 0.8% last month.
Looking back, this setup is reminiscent of market conditions in the third quarter of 2025. Back then, a series of weak national data points from France and Italy preceded a notable downturn in European sentiment and a flight to quality assets. This historical pattern suggests the current weakness may persist longer than a few trading sessions.
Uncertainty surrounding European growth is now rising, which we can see in the derivatives market. One-month implied volatility on EUR/USD options has already climbed from 7.2% to 8.5% over the past week. For those with existing long positions in European assets, now is a critical time to purchase protective puts to hedge against a potential downturn.