- Pound Sterling is displaying topsy-turvy moves as investors are sidelined ahead of inflation data.
- United Kingdom’s inflation is expected to soften slowly as labor market conditions are extremely tight.
- The Bank of England is expected to raise interest rates further to sharpen its quantitative tools against stubborn inflation.
The Pound Sterling (GBP) is stabilizing on Monday above 1.2800 after showing a big bullish performance last week, rallying to levels not seen since April 2022, above 1.2800. Investors are keeping an eye on the United Kingdom’s key inflation data, to be released on Wednesday at 6 GMT. The GBP/USD pair is showing a severe contraction in volatility to start the week, ahead of the release of key price indicators, which will provide guidance about the interest rate policy from the Bank of England (BoE).
Tight labor market conditions and higher food prices in the United Kingdom have remained major catalysts that have been keeping inflationary pressures elevated. More interest rate hikes by the UK central bank are widely expected as inflation has not shown yet evidence of coming down.
Daily digest market movers: Pound Sterling continues its four-day winning streak
- Less volatile action is reported by the Pound Sterling as investors are awaiting the release of the UK Consumer Price Index (CPI) data.
- UK’s monthly headline inflation (May) is expected to show a pace of 0.4%, slower than the pace of 1.2% registered in April.
- Annualized headline CPI is seen softening to 8.5% vs. the prior release of 8.7% while core inflation that excludes oil and food prices is seen steady at 6.8%.
- UK’s food price inflation is hovering near a 45-year high at 19% which is keeping inflationary pressures at higher levels.
- The event of Brexit and the execution of early retirement by individuals have resulted in shortages of labor.
- British firms are offsetting labor shortages by offering higher wages, which have increased households’ demand for core goods and services.
- Reuters reported that the BoE looks set to raise interest rates by a quarter point to a 15-year high of 4.75% on June 22.
- For the interest rate guidance, a poll from Reuters indicates that UK’s interest rates will peak around 6% this year.
- BoE Governor Andrew Bailey has already confirmed that inflation is extremely persistent and will take more time to return to the desired rate than expected earlier.
- UK Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt has ruled out giving any direct fiscal support to households struggling with soaring mortgage costs, as reported by Financial Times. Fiscal support to individuals might fuel the price index and force the central banks to elevate interest rates further.
- IMF expects that the UK will avoid recession this year and has upgraded its economic growth forecast to 0.4%. Earlier, it was expecting a contraction of 0.3%.
- The US Dollar Index (DXY) is inside the woods as investors are having mixed responses about Federal Reserve’s (Fed) policy guidance.
- As per the CME Fedwatch tool, investors are expecting that Fed chair Jerome Powell will hike interest rates just once this year.
- Richmond Fed Bank President Thomas Barkin has commented that raising rates further could create the risk of a more significant slowdown in the economy. It will be comfortable doing more on interest rates if coming data doesn't confirm a story that slowing demand is returning inflation to the 2% target."
- Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsebee commented that there is conflicting data on whether we are too hot or whether we have done enough.
- The United States Consumer Sentiment Index has improved to 63.6 as a soft consumer and producer inflationary pressures have infused optimism among the market participants.
إخلاء المسؤولية: الآراء الواردة هنا تعبر فقط عن رأي الكاتب، ولا تمثل الموقف الرسمي لـ Followme. لا تتحمل Followme مسؤولية دقة أو اكتمال أو موثوقية المعلومات المُقدمة، ولا تتحمل مسؤولية أي إجراءات تُتخذ بناءً على المحتوى، ما لم يُنص على ذلك صراحةً كتابيًا.

اترك رسالتك الآن