Central Bank Signals And Market Pricing
CPI inflation held at 3% in February, and the BoE said it could rise to 3.5% in coming quarters. Markets that had priced two cuts now expect rates to hold through 2026 or potentially rise. UK data due include February retail sales (consensus -0.8% month-on-month) and March GfK consumer confidence, which was -21 versus a -24 consensus. In the US, the Fed held rates at 3.50% to 3.75% and its dot plot showed one cut this year. Initial jobless claims were 210K, matching forecasts. Next US releases include UoM sentiment (consensus 54, prior 55.5) and one-year inflation expectations (consensus 3.4%). On charts, levels cited include 1.3335, 1.3330, 1.3320, 1.3342, 1.3350, 1.3370, 1.3430, 1.3500, and 1.3250. The Pound dates to 886 AD and is the fourth most traded currency, accounting for 12% of FX, or about $630 billion a day in 2022; GBP/USD is 11%, GBP/JPY 3%, and EUR/GBP 2%. We see the GBP/USD pair stuck between conflicting forces, creating a choppy trading range. The Bank of England’s hawkish turn is providing a floor under the pound, but the series of lower highs since late January suggests an underlying weakness. Traders should therefore be cautious about betting on a strong directional breakout in the immediate future.Geopolitics Energy And Sterling Volatility
The war in the Middle East has completely changed the outlook for UK interest rates. We’ve seen Brent crude futures surge 18% over the past four weeks to over $95 a barrel, a level not seen since late 2024. This supply-side shock is forcing the BoE to consider holding rates high despite a weakening economy, with markets now pricing in zero cuts for 2026. This morning’s data will likely confirm the strain on the UK consumer, with retail sales for February expected to be negative. This follows a disappointing 0.5% contraction in January, painting a picture of a consumer squeezed by rising energy costs and stagnant wage growth. This dynamic of high inflation and low growth creates a difficult puzzle for the central bank and for sterling. On the other side of the pair, the US dollar remains on a solid footing. The Federal Reserve’s position appears more straightforward, with their dot plot from last week still signaling one rate cut for 2026. A high inflation expectations number from today’s University of Michigan report would reinforce the Fed’s cautious stance, likely strengthening the dollar and pushing GBP/USD towards the lower end of its recent range. Given the tight range between roughly 1.3230 and 1.3430, selling short-dated call options with strike prices above 1.3450 could be an effective strategy to collect premium. This approach capitalizes on the view that upside momentum is fading, as shown by the pattern of lower highs we’ve observed since the pair peaked near 1.3820 earlier in the year. This strategy benefits from both a drop in price or sideways consolidation. Alternatively, the heightened geopolitical risk suggests an increase in implied volatility is likely. We saw a similar pattern during the initial phases of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, where currency volatility spiked before the market established a new equilibrium. This makes long volatility strategies, such as buying a straddle, attractive for traders anticipating a sharp breakout from the current narrow range. For those trading more direct instruments, we should watch the 1.3430 level, which lines up with the 50-day moving average, as a key area to initiate short positions. A failure to break convincingly above this technical resistance would reinforce the bearish outlook. This keeps the focus on an eventual move back towards the 1.3250 support zone in the coming weeks. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.
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