Euro futures fell for a third consecutive session, dropping about a third of a percent to test March lows and approach 11-month lows. This downward pressure comes amid a transition in Federal Reserve leadership and a renewed rise in U.S. Treasury yields, which boosted the U.S. dollar relative to the euro. Additionally, the European Central Bank remains in focus ahead of upcoming policy decisions, while soft Eurozone economic data indicates a slowing growth structure alongside persistent inflation challenges. While the euro faces notable selling pressure, other major FX markets remain relatively quiet, with the British pound gaining slightly and the Japanese yen, Australian dollar, and Canadian dollar trading near unchanged.