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GBP/USD retreats from daily high towards 1.3700 as USD recovers

  • GBP/USD consolidates gains on the last trading day of the week.
  • US Dollar Index recovers part of its initial losses, trades above 93.00.
  • BOE optimism fades away, Brexit woes keep sterling under pressure. 

The GBP/USD pair flattened on Friday in the Asian trading hours following a sharp rally in the previous session.

Led by the optimism of the Bank of England’s (BOE) surprise hawkish stance, the pair jumped more than 130-pips off the monthly lows near 1.3600 on super Thursday. This Friday, GBP/USD opened lower albeit recovered swiftly to touch the intraday high of 1.3736 but failed to preserve the momentum.

 At the time of writing, the GBP/USD pair is trading at 1.3722, up 0.04% on the day.

The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the performance of the greenback against its six major rivals, turns positive after the early losses on Friday. Investors digested the FOMC policy update but remained pessimistic about the renewed concern of debt payment plans by China’s property giant Evergrande.

The US benchmark 10-year Treasury yields rose by 7.8 basis points following the US Federal Reserve mandate on the timeline and the pace of tapering in its September policy meeting. The Fed could start tapering as soon as November and end in 2022 but also remained vigilant if more stimulus was required in the economy.

On the other hand, the British pound gained traction against the dollar and the euro following the Bank of England (BOE) monetary policy announcement on Thursday, where it kept its interest rate unchanged at 0.1% but warned of a higher inflation rate. Dave Ramsden and Michael Saunders, two of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) members, voted for an early end to pandemic-era stimulus.

Meanwhile, the British Finance Minister Rishi Sunak had ordered two immediate reviews of the country’s financial regulation in concert with the collapse of supply chain finance firm Greensill Capital. The UK parliamentary committee issued a report in July related to Greensill’s collapse. This, in turn, weighs negatively on the performance of the British pound.

In addition to that, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson concedes that a post-Brexit deal with the US is not happening any time in the near future.

As for now, traders keep their focus on the release of the UK CBI Distributive Trades, US Fed official’s speeches, and New Home Sales data to gain some fresh trading impetus.

GBP/USD additional levels

 

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