|

British Pound: Policy divergence seen weigh against Euro – Nomura

Nomura’s Global FX Strategy team, including Dominic Bunning and Yusuke Miyairi, argues that a more hawkish ECB path versus the Bank of England should support the Euro against the Pound. They keep a long EUR/GBP stance and see narrowing front-end rate differentials and UK political-fiscal risks as catalysts for a move in EUR/GBP towards 0.90 over the coming months.

Long EUR/GBP on ECB-BoE divergence

"Hawkish ECB announcements today, as well as potential rate hikes in the future will be EUR positive, in our view. We like to express this via long EUR/GBP, with the GBP leg likely to face adverse pressure due to political fiscal risks."

"We think there is room for EUR to outperform many of its peers as the ECB shows a more hawkish reaction function to upside price pressures. We have maintained a long EUR/GBP trade over recent months, and while the pair has not moved significantly against us, it has also been an incredibly frustrating position to hold, failing to break out to the topside despite a number of risks to GBP (especially on the political and fiscal front). However, we think the clearer signs of monetary policy divergence will ultimately drag the pair higher."

"EUR/GBP has a consistent relationship with front-end rate spreads, and with our new view of a terminal ECB rate of 3.00% versus a BoE rate of 3.50% in 2027 (one hike this year, two cuts next year), a narrowing of the 2y rate differential to below 100bp from 140bp would support a move in EUR/GBP towards 0.90 (Figure 4). Positioning data are mixed but do not suggest many impediments to a move higher in the cross."

"Political and fiscal risks persist for the UK, of course, ahead of the by-election on 18 June which currently seems likely to see Andy Burnham return as an MP and challenge PM Keir Starmer for the top job. The resignation of Defence Secretary John Healey on 11 June further undermines Starmer, but also points to an underlying truth that the fiscal backdrop in the UK is exceedingly tight and will require spending cuts or tax increases. We would think Burnham will favour the latter, weighing on growth further."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD struggles to build on recent rebound, holds above 1.1550

EUR/USD  trades marginally lower on the day but manages to hold above 1.1550 in the American session, following Thursday's rebound. The pair edges down as the US Dollar rebounds slightly as investors cling to a cautious stance amid mixed headlines surrounding the conflict in the Middle East.

GBP/USD retreats below 1.3400 as USD recovers

GBP/USD stays under modest bearish pressure and trades slightly below 1.3400 in the second half of the day on Friday. The renewed USD strength doesn't allow the pair to gain traction as investors adopt a cautious stance while awaiting headlines surrounding the US-Iran war.

Gold retreats from session-high, tests $4,200

After rising more than 3% on Thursday, Gold (XAU/USD) continued to edge higher but failed to gather momentum on Friday, returning to $4,200 region in the American session. The US Dollar rebounds following the recent selloff as investors remain sceptical about a resolution in the Middle East conflict, capping XAU/USD's upside.

Pi Network: Bulls attempt comeback as bearish strength fades

Pi Network (PI) is trading at around $0.120 after a modest recovery the previous day. Despite this recent rebound, traders should be cautious as a scheduled unlock of 14.8 million PI tokens on Friday could limit the token's recovery potential by increasing market supply. Meanwhile, the technical outlook is showing early signs of fading bearish momentum, suggesting a short-term bounce.

UoM Consumer Sentiment Index expected to remain depressed near historical lows in June

The University of Michigan (UoM) will release the preliminary estimate of June’s Consumer Sentiment Index on Friday. The report is expected to show that consumers’ confidence remains depressed.

4.2% headline, 0.2% core: Why the Fed's next hike may be targeting the wrong problem

May's CPI put headline inflation at 4.2% on the year, up from 3.8% in April and the hottest reading since April 2023, while core prices rose just 0.2% on the month, undershooting the 0.3% consensus and halving April's pace.