BRITISH POUND TALKING POINTS
GBP/USD trades to fresh 2018 lows as fresh data prints coming out of the U.K. do little to sway the monetary policy outlook, and recent price action warns of a further decline in the exchange rate as the Relative Strength Index (RSI) pushes deeper into oversold territory.
GBP/USD EYES JUNE 2017-LOW AS U.K. CPI FAILS TO IMPRESS
GBP/USD appears to be on its way to test the June 2017-low (1.2589) as the 2.5% print for U.K. CPI fails to produce a bullish reaction, and the updates to the Retail Sales report may also sap the appeal of the British Pound as the reading for core consumption is expected to hold flat in July after contracting 0.6% the month prior.
Another batch of lackluster data prints should keep the Bank of England (BoE) on hold at the next meeting on September 13 as ‘recent CPI data were signaling slightly weaker inflationary pressures,’ and the central bank may stick to the sidelines throughout the remainder of the year as the ‘economic outlook could be influenced significantly by the response of households, businesses and financial markets to developments related to the process of EU withdrawal’.
Keep in mind, it seems as though Governor Mark Carney & Co. will continue to normalize monetary policy in 2019 as officials reiterate that ‘an ongoing tightening of monetary policy over the forecast period would be appropriate to return inflation sustainably to the 2% target at a conventional horizon,’ but the recent comments suggest the central bank is in no rush to implement higher borrowing costs as ‘any future increases in Bank Rate are likely to be at a gradual pace and to a limited extent’.
With that said, the IG Client Sentiment Report still shows retail sentiment near extremes, with 71.1% of traders net-long GBP/USD as the ratio of traders long to short sits at 2.46 to 1. Traders have remained net-long GBP/USD since April 20 when the exchange rate traded near 1.40482 even though the price has moved 9.7% lower since then. The number of traders net-long is 7.5% lower than yesterday and 10.1% lower from last week, while the number of traders net-short is 2.7% higher than yesterday and 2.5% higher from last week.
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