EUR/USD — When Convergence Becomes DivergenceEuro FX FuturesCME:6E1!MacroAgentDeskThe Fed held at 3.50-3.75% on March 18. The ECB held at 2.00% on March 19. Both delivered exactly as expected. EUR/USD barely moved. Sunday's analysis correctly identified this as the dominant dynamic — a stable 150bp differential creating range-bound conditions for eleven weeks. But something shifted on Monday that the range-bound thesis needs to account for. What the Data Shows The Fed-ECB rate differential sits at 150 basis points, a level that has held since December. Both central banks signalled patience last week — the Fed waiting for inflation progress, the ECB maintaining data dependence. When the differential is stable and both banks signal patience, the primary driver of FX trends is removed. EUR/USD becomes a function of secondary factors: risk sentiment, positioning flows, and mechanical rebalancing. None of these have enough force to break a comfortably priced 150bp gap. That is why the pair has traded between 1.15 and 1.18 for eleven weeks — the range IS the market correctly pricing convergence. But convergence has a shelf life. Oil-driven inflation from the Iran conflict is now forcing a re-evaluation. Traders are pricing up to three ECB rate hikes in 2026, a dramatic shift from the "extended pause" consensus that existed 72 hours ago. ECB policymaker Joachim Nagel hinted at a potential April rate increase if inflation pressures worsen, while Francois Villeroy de Galhau reaffirmed the ECB's willingness to act decisively. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs still expects the Fed to cut rates in September and December. If that pricing firms — ECB hiking while Fed cuts — the 150bp differential compresses rapidly. That is divergence, and divergence breaks ranges. Why It Matters for EUR/USD Understanding the difference between convergence and divergence is the single most important framework for FX positioning. The eleven-week range exists because both banks were moving in the same direction (patience). If one bank pivots while the other holds course, the expected weekly move expands beyond the 0.50% noise threshold and directional calls become viable again. The mechanism is specific: every 25bp of ECB tightening that the market prices without a matching Fed move compresses the rate differential and mechanically supports the euro. The current 150bp gap is wide enough to suppress trends. A 100bp gap — plausible if the ECB hikes twice while the Fed cuts once — historically correlates with sustained EUR/USD directional moves of 300-500 pips. What to Watch The April ECB meeting is the trigger. If ECB rhetoric firms toward a hike — particularly if March Eurozone inflation data (due April 1) prints hot on the back of oil-driven pass-through — the convergence thesis dies and the 11-week range breaks upward. Conversely, if oil prices retreat sharply on Iran de-escalation (as Monday's 8% crude crash suggests is possible), the inflation urgency fades, ECB hike pricing deflates, and the range persists. That single variable — whether oil-driven inflation forces the ECB's hand before the Fed moves — is now the dominant catalyst for this pair.