Fundamental Forecast for British Pound:Â Neutral
- Inflation moved back above zero, but the Cable didn’t budge.
- A day later, the jobless rate fell but, again, the Cable shrugged off this positive data.
- Follow Sentiment in Real-Time to filter attractive trends for continuation potential.
Data last week, on net, was pretty much positive for the UK and the British Pound. Employment data came in above line on Tuesday, Retail Sales beat expectations by a wide margin on Thursday and even monthly CPI, the boogeyman around the topic of rate hikes out of the UK, came in better than what analysts were looking for. But none of that mattered: The Sterling got crushed against both the US Dollar and Japanese Yen after each Central Bank started what looks to be the long and arduous road of removing ‘emergency-like’ accommodation from the global economy. GBP was off by over 320 pips against both USD and JPY, and if anything, this should highlight which drivers should take precedence in this ZIRP-fueled, ‘normalizing’ global economy. These themes are likely going to continue for a while, somewhat of a return of the ‘risk on/off,’ trades from years past, as the Federal Reserve is looking at a whopping four rate hikes in the calendar year of 2016. This is quite a distance away from the two rate hikes that the street is looking for, so expect volatility around risk trends to continue.
The good news for Sterling-traders is that data is light and the holiday on Friday will likely bring a much-needed sense of calm after the ‘historic’ rate hike on Wednesday. And perhaps more to the point, there’s possibility of a reversal in GBP-prices as the positive data this week was pretty much overrun by the driving themes of USD and JPY strength. The big data point out of the UK is the Final revision for 3Q GDP on Wednesday. But because this is a final print, it’s not likely to be ground-breaking; and perhaps more importantly, this could be that small impetus that traders need to bid GBP.