For the most of November, Sterling Euro was kept in an aggressive uptrend where it advanced by over 4 and a half cents. The market is expecting that the ECB will be forced to add more to its accommodative policy in an attempt to boost anaemic inflation by stimulating the ailing economy. Despite breaking the uptrend Sterling Euro has consolidated near the 8 year high and is likely to remain in consolidation mode as we await the announcement this week.

The Eurozone recovery has been termed ‘fragile’ by ECB officials as they have cited the impact of global economic slowdown led by the developments linked to China and other emerging markets as a real concern. ECB president Draghi has reiterated the central bank has a duty to increase inflation closer to its 2 % target which must be done “as quickly as possible.” The Governing Council has underlined that they will act, if warranted, by using all available tools within its mandate. The ECB current stance of record low rates and quantitative easing is not gaining sufficient traction, so it is rumoured that the ECB are considering further options such as two-tiered bank charges and propping up its 1.1 trillion-euro ($1.2 trillion) asset-purchase programme as they seek to revive inflation in the currency bloc.

The Bank of England have signalled that the need to raise borrowing costs in the U.K has receded given the gloomier prospects for global growth as the they cut their inflation projections. UK inflation remained below zero for a second consecutive month in October. We shouldn’t be alarmed yet as the headline inflation has probably reached its low as the recent drop largely reflects transitory factors that should start to fall out of the annual calculation over the next few months. Wage increases are picking up and skill shortages are increasing, which will give added momentum to price rises through the impact on business costs.

The UK economy however expanded below-trend over the third quarter as net trade dampened quarterly growth by the biggest amount on record as it wiped off 1.5% off the GDP. On a yearly basis, the country’s economy grew 2.3 % which marks the 11th consecutive month of positive growth in the U.K, its longest stretch of growth since the 2009 financial crisis. According to George Osbourne the UK economy will grow even more quickly over the next two years than their previous forecasts had suggested.

This has supported market perception that the Bank of England monetary policy will diverge from the ECBs, which should be a key driver in the Sterling Euro exchange rate in the longer term. The market has almost fully priced in more accommodative measures, so if the markets were left disappointed after the ECB meeting we could see an aggressive correction lower in the short term - classic scenario of buy the rumour sell the fact.

For EUR Buyers
We are back near the 8 year highs; it may be prudent to reduce any near term exposure around the current levels. We only have to look at past price action where the market corrected from 1.4300 to the low 1.30s in the space of a couple of months. Much will depend on what the measures are, but we feel a large portion of any easing is priced in, therefore we may not see that much more upside. The initial level to target would be the 8 year high were it topped out in late July but it would be important to leave a stop loss as protection just below the 1.40 levels which coincides with 61.8% Fibonacci retracement in case we do see that correction.

For EUR Sellers
It is almost certain the ECB will unveil a new form of stimulus but the question remains, how much will be announced? It is likely they will announce something so it may be prudent to still reduce some exposure here and hope for the correction. Unless they announce something completely out of left field the risk/reward should be skewed to the downside (your favour). Protect yourself in the form of Stop loss above 1.4300 in case the ECB do announce that bazooka and the Euro weakens.

gbpeur

Trading foreign exchange on margin carries a high level of risk, and may not be suitable for all investors. The high degree of leverage can work against you as well as for you. Before deciding to invest in foreign exchange you should carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite. The possibility exists that you could sustain a loss of some or all of your initial investment and therefore you should not invest money that you cannot afford to lose. You should be aware of all the risks associated with foreign exchange trading, and seek advice from an independent financial advisor if you have any doubts.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD remains firm above 0.6600 ahead of RBA

AUD/USD remains firm above 0.6600 ahead of RBA

AUD/USD maintains its bullish bias well and sound on Monday, extending the multi-session recovery past the 0.6600 barrier ahead of the key interest rate decision by the RBA.

AUD/USD News

EUR/USD keeps the constructive tone near 1.0800

EUR/USD keeps the constructive tone near 1.0800

EUR/USD started the week in a positive note amidst the Dollar’s inconclusive price action, altogether motivating the pair to attempt a move to the proximity of the 1.0800 region, where the 200-day SMA also converges.

EUR/USD News

Gold holds on to modest gains around $2,320

Gold holds on to modest gains around $2,320

Gold trades decisively higher on the day above $2,320 in the American session. Retreating US Treasury bond yields after weaker-than-expected US employment data and escalating geopolitical tensions help XAU/USD stretch higher.

Gold News

Bitcoin price holds above $63K as MicroStrategy tops BTC ownership list

Bitcoin price holds above $63K as MicroStrategy tops BTC ownership list

Bitcoin (BTC) price recorded a rather bold two days this past weekend in a surge that saw millions in positions liquidated. However, the week is off to a calm start with altcoins sucking liquidity from the BTC market.

Read more

Stagflation warning: Service economy contracts as prices rise

Stagflation warning: Service economy contracts as prices rise

In another stagflation warning sign, the U.S. service sector contracted in April even as service prices rose. The Institute for Supply Management's non-manufacturing PMI dropped to 49.4 in April, dipping from 51.4 in March. 

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures