GBP/USD RETRACES FROM FIVE-WEEK HIGH, AMIDST RISING US BOND YIELDS, EYES KEY US-UK ECONOMIC DATA RELEASES

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  • GBP/USD dips after failing to breach 1.2600, now trading at 1.2497 amid climbing US Treasury bond yields.
  • GBP/USD traders lean on last week’s US PMI, highlighting an ongoing economic slowdown.
  • BoE’s rate hike hints echo amid inflation concerns as the market keenly awaits US CPI and UK employment figures.

GBP/USD slumps in the North American session after reaching a fresh five-week high at 1.2599 amidst a light economic calendar, which would gain interest since Tuesday. Rising US Treasury bond yields and some US Dollar (USD) strength keep the Sterling (GBP) under downward pressure following the GBP/USD failure to crack 1.2600. At the time of writing, the GBP/USD is trading at 1.2513.

Sterling struggles against strengthening USD and climbing US Treasury yields as the market awaits US and UK economic indicators.

Wall Street continues to trade in a positive direction. At the same time US Treasury bond yields climb, as the 10-year US T-note yields 3.774%, three basis points (bps) up from its opening yield. Consequently, the DXY is printing modest gains of 0.15% at 103.706.

Given the lack of economic data revealed on Monday, GBP/USD traders lean onto the last week’s US data. The ISM revealed its Services PMI, which expanded but is dangerously edging towards the 50 lines, seen as an expansionary/recessionary level, suggesting the economy continues to deteriorate. That, alongside the jump in unemployment claims for the week ending June 2, justified the US Federal Reserve (Fed) stance to pause rate increases.

Aside from this, a parade of Bank of England (BoE) policymakers crossed newswires, led by Jonathan Haskel, who said the BoE “may need to raise rates more than once, from the current 4.5% level to control inflation.

Echoing some of his comments, Catherine Mann said that inflation expectations remain high, but the latest drop was important to shift her stance from a 50 to a 25 bps hike in the latest meeting. She said service inflation and wage price increases are a concern “for achieving the 2% CPI target.” Mann added,  “Monetary policy is not good at fine-tuning, should focus on inflation

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