The Pound to Dollar exchange rate (GBP/USD) has fallen sharply to 1.3230, its weakest level in several weeks, as investors responded positively to the Federal Reserve's policy guidance while remaining cautious over the UK outlook. Although both the Federal Reserve and Bank of England left interest rates unchanged, markets interpreted the Fed's message as relatively supportive for the Dollar while the Bank of England's prolonged pause reinforced concerns over UK growth prospects.
GBP/USD Forecasts: Dollar Strength Reasserts Itself
The Pound to Dollar (GBP/USD) exchange rate has fallen back sharply after a volatile week dominated by central bank decisions, slipping below the key 1.3300 level as the US Dollar gained broad support.
The Federal Reserve and Bank of England both left interest rates unchanged at 3.75%, but the market reaction proved markedly different for the two currencies.
According to BBH; “We expect GBP/USD to fall to 1.3100, reflecting a stronger US growth outlook relative to the UK."
While no immediate policy changes were announced, investors focused on guidance from the Federal Reserve and new Chair Kevin Warsh's first policy meeting.
Danske Bank commented; “We do not expect firm forward guidance from Kevin Warsh regarding future rate moves. We expect the distribution of individual rate views and inflation forecasts to shift higher from March across the rest of the FOMC, while growth and unemployment rate forecasts will remain steadier.”
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The Federal Reserve maintained a cautious stance but stopped short of pushing back aggressively against market expectations that rates may need to remain restrictive for longer.
According to MUFG; “Sentiment has clearly improved for the dollar based on US factors like a more resilient labour market. So, this goes some way to explaining the resilience of the US dollar this week despite the continued sharp falls in crude oil prices.”
The stronger Dollar tone has been reinforced by recent economic releases. Non-farm payrolls exceeded expectations while inflation data has remained elevated enough to keep discussions of further tightening alive.
ING commented; “The view that the Fed will react to this inflation shock has been central to the dollar's recovery over the last month.”
The bank added; “US real interest rates have risen sharply over recent weeks and that has provided a strong underpinning for the US dollar.”
The Bank of England also left rates unchanged at 3.75%, as expected.
While there were dissenting votes in favour of a hike, the overall tone of the meeting reinforced the view that policymakers are prepared to wait for further evidence before tightening policy.
Recent UK inflation data has been softer than expected, reducing pressure for immediate action. Markets are now much less confident that the BoE will deliver multiple rate hikes this year.
This shift has undermined one of Sterling's key sources of support over recent months.
The Bank continues to face difficult trade-offs between slowing economic activity and the risk that higher energy prices could eventually feed into broader inflation pressures.
Politics is also becoming a larger influence on the Pound outlook.
The Makerfield by-election remains a major event risk, particularly given speculation that a strong result could increase pressure on Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
BBH commented; "The UK political backdrop can amplify a GBP decline, with Thursday’s Makerfield by-election a key event risk. Polls show Andy Burnham leading Reform UK by anywhere from 3 to 12 points, potentially clearing a path for a leadership challenge to Prime Minister Keir Starmer."
It added; “A Burnham-led Labour government will likely lead to more spending and borrowing, worsening UK fiscal credibility."
Investors remain sensitive to any developments that could alter perceptions of future UK fiscal policy, especially at a time when government borrowing costs remain elevated.
The combination of a resilient US economy, firm US yields, expectations that the Federal Reserve may maintain a hawkish bias and ongoing UK political uncertainty has shifted momentum in favour of the Dollar.
GBP/USD has now broken below the 1.3300 area that previously provided support in May. If selling pressure persists, markets will increasingly focus on the next major support zone around 1.3160.
For Sterling to recover meaningfully, investors will likely need to see a deterioration in US economic data, a less hawkish Federal Reserve outlook or a reduction in UK political uncertainty over the coming weeks.
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