Forex Critical: Speculators Flip The Script On The British Pound

Speculators are net bullish on the British pound (FXB) for the first time in almost two years.

Speculators flip the script on the British pound and are net long for the first time since late October, 2015.

Source: Oanda’s CFTC’s Commitments of Traders

While the net long position is barely above zero, the flip of the script is still significant given how little time speculators have spent bullish on the pound since at least 2008.

Speculators tend to short the British pound.

Source: Oanda’s CFTC’s Commitments of Traders

This bullishness is long overdue given the pound has generally strengthened against the U.S. dollar all year. Against other major currencies, like the euro, a resurgence started in early September and found confirmation in hawkish words from Mark Carney and the Bank of England (BoE).

The British pound strengthened enough this year to begin closing its post-Brexit gap down against the U.S. dollar (GBP/USD).

EUR/GBP weakened rapidly enough in September to challenge critical support at its 200-day moving average (DMA).

The British pound swung wildly and widely against the Japanese yen this year. GBP/JPY now clings to a post-Brexit high.

Source: FreeStockCharts.com

So the big question is whether traders can sustain this newfound bullish sentiment. As I have stated in an earlier post, I am skeptical that the Bank of England can cling to its hawkishness for long. However, I also do not like fighting momentum in the currency market without a very strong thesis to do so. For now, the path of least resistance is up for the British pound. That may not change until the Bank of England actually makes a decision on a rate hike at its next meeting. At that time, if the BoE fails to hike, the pound should sell-off steeply even if it claims its bias remains on the side of a rate hike. Even if the BoE hikes, I expect it to tone down its hawkishness and thus step the bullish tide on the currency. The UK economy can ill afford a currency that sustains a months long rally with the economic downsides of Brexit likely to come starting in 2018.

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