GBP/USD has posted slight gains in Wednesday trade. In the North American session, the pair is trading at 1.3050, up 0.19% on the day. On the release front, British Preliminary GDP edged up to 0.3% in the second quarter, matching the forecast. In the US, New Home Sales remained steady at 610 thousand, short of the estimate of 615 thousand. Later in the day, the Federal Reserve releases its rate statement and is expected to maintain the benchmark at 1.25%. On Thursday, the US will release two key indicators – Unemployment Claims and Core Durable Goods Orders.
There were no surprises from British Preliminary GDP in the second quarter, which gained 0.3%, compared to 0.2% in the first quarter. This follows first quarter growth of 0.3%. Government statisticians are saying that the economy experienced a “notable slowdown” in the first half of 2017. Although the services sector expanded by 0.5% in the quarter, construction declined 0.9% and manufacturing dropped 0.4%. The soft numbers have dampened expectations for a rate hike from the Bank of England. Policymakers have engaged in a public debate about rate policy, but a second straight quarter of low growth will be ammunition for those policymakers who are against a rate hike before 2018. Although economic expansion remains weak, inflation levels are higher than the BoE would like, courtesy of a weak British pound. The currency’s woes have also hurt the British consumer, who has seen her purchasing power reduced.
The Federal Reserve will be in the spotlight later on Wednesday, as it concludes its monthly policy meeting and releases a rate statement. The Fed is not expected to alter its interest rate policy, but the rate statement could still be a market-mover. The rate statement will be under careful scrutiny, as analysts will be looking for any references to the “I” word. Inflation continues to hover around 1.4% (based on the Fed’s calculations), well below the Fed target of 2%. In June, Janet Yellen described low inflation as “transitory”, but recent comments from Yellen and other policymakers have shifted in tone, an apparent acknowledgment that inflation may remain stuck at low levels. This has raised doubts as to whether the Fed will indeed raise rates one more time this year. No move is expected before December, and the odds of a December hike have fallen to just 37%, according to the CME Group. If today’s rate statement fails to reassure the markets that a December hike is planned, investors could respond by selling dollar-denominated assets in favor of other currencies or gold.
Another key issue on the Fed’s agenda is when to begin tapering the Fed’s $4.2 trillion bond portfolio. The bloated balance sheet is a result of the aggressive quantitative easing program which was put in place after the financial crisis in 2008. In June, the Fed outlined plans to taper purchases, with experts circling September as the start date of the reduction. This would involve the Fed tapering the purchases of Treasury bonds and mortgage securities, with an initial taper likely of $10 billion/month. Analysts expect the taper to begin in September, so we could see the Fed make reference to this in the July statement.
GBP/USD Fundamentals
Wednesday (July 26)
- 4:30 British Preliminary GDP. Estimate 0.3%. Actual 0.3%
- 4:30 British BBA Mortgage Approvals. Estimate 39.9K. Actual 40.2K
- 4:30 British Index of Services. Estimate 0.4%. Actual 0.4%
- 10:00 US New Home Sales. Estimate 615K. Actual 610K
- 10:30 US Crude Oil Inventories. Estimate -3.3M. Actual -7.2M
- 14:00 US FOMC Statement
- 14:00 US Federal Funds Rate. Estimate <1.25%
Thursday (July 27)
- 8:30 US Core Durable Goods Orders. Estimate 0.4%
- 8:30 US Unemployment Claims. Estimate 240K
*All release times are EDT
*Key events are in bold
GBP/USD for Wednesday, July 26, 2017
GBP/USD July 26 at 12:05 EDT
Open: 1.3026 High: 1.3067 Low: 1.2999 Close: 1.3050
GBP/USD Technical
S1 | S2 | S1 | R1 | R2 | R3 |
1.2706 | 1.2865 | 1.2946 | 1.3058 | 1.3121 | 1.3238 |
- GBP/USD showed little movement in the Asian session. The pair edged higher but then retracted in the European session. In North American trade, the pair has posted gains.
- 1.2946 is providing support
- 1.3058 was tested earlier in resistance and is a weak line
Further levels in both directions:
- Below: 1.2946, 1.2865 and 1.2706
- Above: 1.3058, 1.3121, 1.3238 and 1.3347
- Current range: 1.2946 to 1.3058
OANDA’s Open Positions Ratio
GBP/USD ratio is unchanged in the Wednesday session. Currently, long positions have a slight majority (53%), indicative of slight trader bias towards GBP/USD continuing to post gains.
This article is for general information purposes only. It is not investment advice or a solution to buy or sell securities. Opinions are the authors; not necessarily that of OANDA Corporation or any of its affiliates, subsidiaries, officers or directors. Leveraged trading is high risk and not suitable for all. You could lose all of your deposited funds.