Will The Bank Of England Rescue GBP?

 | Oct 31, 2018 08:20

By Kathy Lien, Managing Director of FX Strategy for BK Asset Management.

Its time to turn your focus to the British pound because on Thursday, the Bank of England will release its Quarterly Inflation report followed by a monetary policy announcement. They are not expected to change interest rates but changes to their economic projections and the overall tone of the report will have a significant impact on the currency. Sterling dropped to a 2-month low versus the U.S. dollar Tuesday as the BoE’s Inflation report and Governor Carney’s comments will determine whether the currency falls through its August lows or turns higher from here.

Based on the persistent decline in GBP/USD, investors are bracing for the worst.
While the following table shows widespread deterioration in the UK economy since the September meeting, it is important to realize that overall, the economy is doing well. The unemployment rate is low, inflation is well above the central bank’s target and wages are on the rise.

The last time the Quarterly Inflation report was released, the central bank also raised interest rates but at that time, sterling crashed because the central bank made it clear that they had no plans to tighten again as Carney talked about the scenarios that would require a rate cut if Britain failed to reach a deal with the European Union. Fast-forward 2 months and the UK is still no closer to an agreement. They are beyond the critical period of negotiations, which means Carney will be even more worried about the downside risks. As a result, traders cannot count on the central bank to rescue the pound because they’ve made it clear that the outlook for the UK economy hinges on Brexit negotiations. If the central bank cuts its economic projections or Carney spends a good part of his press conference talking about the possibility of easing, GBP/USD will drop to to 1.26 and EUR/GBP will head toward 90 cents. However if they downplay recent data deterioration and focus on the upside risk of inflation, the heavily sold GBP will reverse quickly as short covering takes GBP/USD back above 1.2850.