Bank Of England Policy And Inflation Risks
The Bank of England kept rates at 3.75% on Thursday, with a unanimous MPC vote after markets had expected a 7-2 split. The BoE said Middle East tensions could lift CPI inflation to 3% to 3.5% by Q3, and markets now price about 65 basis points of tightening in 2026. Tuesday brings flash S&P Global PMIs for March. UK manufacturing is seen at 51.1 (from 51.7) and services at 53.0 (from 53.9); US manufacturing is seen at 51.6 and services at 51.7. In the 1-hour view, price is above the 200-period EMA near 1.3350, with support at 1.3400, 1.3350, and 1.3270. Resistance sits at 1.3450 and 1.3500. Looking back to this time in 2025, we saw GBP/USD rallying toward 1.3500 on a temporary de-escalation of geopolitical tensions. That brief strength was built on a technical structure that has since faded entirely. Today, with the pair trading closer to 1.27, that optimism seems distant, and any upward momentum is now viewed with much more skepticism.Options Volatility And Hedge Positioning
We saw the Bank of England’s surprise hawkish hold at 3.75% in March 2025, which led markets to price in significant tightening. The reality was that inflation pressures forced the bank rate to a peak of 5.25%, where it has remained into early 2026. This means options pricing should now reflect a central bank that is far more cautious about cutting rates than previously thought, making long-dated call options on GBP/USD less attractive. The warning in 2025 about inflation hitting 3.5% proved correct, as UK CPI for February 2026 registered at 3.4%. Similarly, the Federal Reserve, then expected to make one cut from a 3.75% rate, ultimately pushed its own benchmark well above 5% to combat persistent price pressures. This aggressive hiking cycle from both central banks has ultimately capped sterling’s upside and compressed the interest rate differential. The mildly bullish technical structure we saw in 2025 above 1.3350 has completely broken down over the past year. Current one-month implied volatility for GBP/USD is hovering near 6.5%, which is historically subdued and indicates the market isn’t anticipating large, sudden swings. This environment is favorable for selling options to collect premium, such as writing covered calls against long positions or selling cash-secured puts below key support like 1.2600. As we await this week’s PMI data, the primary focus should be on downside protection rather than chasing the upside seen in 2025. Traders could use forward contracts to hedge any dollar-denominated payables, locking in the current exchange rate. Given the low volatility, buying cheap out-of-the-money puts offers a cost-effective way to protect against a further slide in the pound if this week’s economic data disappoints. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.
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