Relative Currency Strength

The most influential British news of the period was the result of the MPC vote on rate hike released on Wednesday. As the BoE minutes revealed that two of the policy makers unexpectedly supported the immediate rise in interest rate, the pound skyrocketed against its peers, bringing the GBP Index 0.38 points above the base value. Weaker- than-expected growth in retail sales reported the next day did not have such pronounced influence, and the index lost only 0.06 points — a change, almost indistinguishable among other movements. Afterwards there were no fundamentals to guide the pound, and the index proceeded to gradually strengthen against the background of the Jackson Hole symposium.

The pound’s evolution throughout the past five trading days was wavy, but, after the plunge on August 19 CPI data, the base value for the currency was not high, and the GBP Index managed to hold above the baseline for most of the period. The index posted a 0.22% weekly gain, significantly improving its results compared to the past few periods. Three of the observed currencies — the U.S, the Australian, and the Canadian dollars, — were steadily surpassing the pound, and ended up reporting greater advances. The other currency indexes finished the period well below the baseline. Meanwhile, the monthly change of the GBP Index remained negative.


Volatility

The BoE minutes fuelled surge of the pound was well observed in the currency’s turbulence, causing the GBP Volatility Index to reach the period’s maximum as most of its components spiked to their highest peaks. The release of the UK retail sales on Thursday coincided with another spike in the index, but, as the day was filled with news from various countries and the market volatility was also elevated, it is unlikely that the shock was caused solely by the British fundamentals. The rest of the period was relatively calm, with the GBP Volatility Index holding below that of the market in absence of the specifically pound-related events.

The period was modest in terms of volatility, with both the market and GBP indexes holding above historical average for only one fifth of the time. GBP/NZD was the only pound’s cross with the portion of elevated volatility greater than 30%, and with that posted the greatest average volatility index value. Meanwhile, the EUR/GBP and GBP/CHF indexes reached the period’s highest peaks, both against the background of the BoE minutes release.


Currency Significance

The gauge reached its maximal value of 0.60 on Wednesday, when the UK pound surged against its counterparts following the release of BoE latest minutes. GBP significance started to weaken when the FOMC Minutes made the Greenback a market driver. The measure continued to decline on Thursday as lower-than-expected UK Retail Sales turned out to be insignificant against the background of Sweden employment data, which notably influenced the domestic currency, and Jackson Hole Symposium, which drew attention to several currencies. As the current trading week started with a Bank Holiday in the UK, GBP significance was on its low, but retrieved after the release of unexpectedly low number of mortgage approvals of Tuesday.

The observed period was marked with low correlations of GBP/USD and GBP crosses. All the distributions were significantly skewed down, which brought mean correlations closer to zero. One reason for that could be the period covering only a few UK data releases in contrast with a host of data from other countries. Thus, the average correlation of GBP pairs, which measures significance of the currency, started the period on a relatively strong 0.56 position, but weakened shortly and was varying in range from 0.20 to 0.48 for the rest of the time.

This overview can be used only for informational purposes. Dukascopy SA is not responsible for any losses arising from any investment based on any recommendation, forecast or other information herein contained.

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