EUR/PLN rebounded after respecting the ascending trend line in place since February 2025 near 4.2100. Since then, price action has repeatedly oscillated around the 200-day moving average, with the 200-DMA referenced at 4.2437.
Near term, the cross is best described as range-bound between support at 4.2100 and resistance at 4.2600. A sustained break above 4.2600 or below 4.2100 would be the trigger for a clearer directional trend.
Key Levels And Market Bias
With EUR/PLN currently lacking direction, the ongoing pivot around the 200-DMA near 4.2437 remains the central reference point. Traders should continue to respect 4.2100 as the key downside level (trend line support from February 2025) and 4.2600 as the near-term ceiling.
The immediate catalyst is the National Bank of Poland meeting, where the policy rate is expected to remain unchanged at 3.75%. The communication matters more than the decision itself, and any hawkish tilt in the statement or Governor Glapiński’s press remarks could be enough to strengthen PLN and press EUR/PLN back below the 200-DMA.
That sensitivity is reinforced by the inflation backdrop. April CPI is framed as an upside surprise, driven mainly by fuel and energy despite price caps and tax cuts, keeping attention on oil prices, second-round effects, and the possibility that policy could need to lean tighter later.
This setup can suit options traders looking for a breakout from the well-defined range. With one-month implied volatility cited around 7.8%, a long strangle (buying an out-of-the-money call and an out-of-the-money put) is a clean way to position for a move beyond 4.2600 or below 4.2100 after NBP communication.
Longer term, forward markets are described as pricing up to four rate hikes over the next 12 months, taking the policy rate to 4.75%, though that pricing is expected to fade over time. If those rate-hike expectations ease, it would typically reduce PLN support and tilt risks toward a gradual grind higher in EUR/PLN.
Positioning For A Higher Drift
For a multi-week horizon, that argues for strategies that benefit from upside drift while controlling downside. One approach is buying longer-dated calls with strikes just above 4.2600, which would gain if the market scales back aggressive tightening expectations and EUR/PLN lifts through resistance.