Pound Sterling tumbles as investors shift focus to UK recession fears

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Pound Sterling falls sharply to near 1.2750 against the US Dollar as risk-appetite fades.High inflation and recession fears in the UK may complicate the idea of BoE remaining a laggard in cutting rates.The economic calendar is light due to the festive season.

The Pound Sterling (GBP) falls vertically from fresh four-month high as investors hope that the Bank of England (BoE) may shift to a dovish monetary policy stance amid easing inflationary pressures in the United Kingdom economy. The GBP/USD pair fails to continue winning streak as the market mood has turned downbeat despite early rate cut expectations from the Federal Reserve (Fed).

BoE policymakers are expected to face enormous difficulties as price pressures in the United Kingdom are high in comparison with other Group of Seven economies and the economy is on the verge of a technical recession due to deteriorating demand in domestic and overseas markets. The BoE could be forced to turn dovish due to economic shrinkage. 

Daily Digest Market Movers: Pound Sterling drops sharply while US Dollar finds support

  • Pound Sterling fails to hold gains as investors worry about deepening fears of a recession in the UK economy.
  • The demand for the Pound Sterling is fading as the Bank of England may not be the laggard in reducing borrowing costs.
  • The expectations of a technical recession in the UK economy deepened after the Office for National Statistics (ONS) revised in a slight contraction in Q3 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by 0.1%, escalating the need for early rate cut discussions.
  • Chances for unwinding of BoE’s tight monetary policy stance would escalate if the UK economy shrinks in the last quarter of 2024.
  • The BoE reported in its latest projections that the economy would remain stagnant in the last quarter.
  • UK Finance Minister Jeremy Hunt said last week there is a reasonable chance that if we stick to the course, the administration would be able to bring inflation down and the central bank would start cutting interest rates.
  • Meanwhile, the underlying inflation in the UK economy is still highest in comparison with other Group of Seven economies, which would keep BoE policymakers on toes.
  • The UK core Consumer Price Index (CPI) has softened to 5.1% but is still more than double the required rate of 2% due to robust wage growth.
  • BoE policymakers may divide on whether to keep restrictive monetary policy stance for a longer period or to start unwinding higher interest rates.
  • On the US Dollar front, the US Dollar Index (DXY) finds cushion near 100.60, but broader demand is still weak.
  • The overall market mood is still upbeat as investors lean towards expectations of early rate cuts by the Federal Reserve.
  • The Fed is expected to start lowering borrowing costs from March as price pressures in the United States economy are clearly in a downtrend.
  • This week, action in the FX domain has clearly indicated that markets are confident about early rate cuts by the Fed. The US Dollar may continue to face pressure despite thin trading volume and light economic docket.
  • Meanwhile, the US Department of Labor has reported that individuals claiming jobless benefits for the first time were higher at 218K gaianst expectations of 210K and the former reading of 205K.

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