The GBP/USD has fallen onto the back foot in recent trade and is pressuring back below 1.3515 following a significant correction to 1.3535 as of the early New York session from the 1.3490 territory as traders digest the importance of last week’s main events in the central bank meetings as well as US jobs data.
The BoE raised the Bank Rate by 25bp to 0.50% and announced the beginning of passive QT last week. However, the big surprise was that four out of nine policymakers voted for a 50bp rate hike. This set cable higher to test 1.3630.
On Friday, there was an unexpected jump in US jobs created in January according to Nonfarm Payrolls that bizarrely completely contradicted the ADP report that was also reported last week. Nevertheless, the NFP report has raised the outlook for a faster timetable for Federal Reserve rate hikes.
Payrolls grew 467,000 jobs last month and data for December was revised higher to show 510,000 jobs created instead of the previously reported 199,000. Reuters had forecast 150,000 jobs added in January while estimates ranged from a decrease of 400,000 to a gain of 385,000 jobs.
In stark contrast, the ADP private payroll jobs fell 301k in January, versus expectations for a 180k rise. That drop followed a weak initial claims report for the labour market survey week in January. This had resulted in a wave of downward revisions for Friday’s official nonfarm payrolls release, which was flipped on its head ad traders moved back into the US dollar.
The outcome has resulted in some analysts questioning the reliance of such a gauge. There were vast backward revisions for years. The million jobs created last summer now happened this winter. The financial markets depend on the data and the outcome reignites expectations the Fed hikes rates by 50 bps in March. GBP/USD, consequently, fell when the US dollar rallied 0.1% on the back of Friday’s data.
For the week ahead, there are two key data events. One, market participants are waiting to see the release of US Consumer Price data for January on Thursday and on Friday, preliminary UK Gross Domestic Product is due for the fourth quarter and December.
We look for UK GDP to contract 0.8% MoM in December, thus bringing GDP below its pre-COVID level once again,” analysts at TD Securities said.
Manufacturing likely declined 0.3% MoM, while we expect the services sector to contract 0.9% moM, in part driven by voluntary COVID measures and a substantial amount of people isolating due to the Omicron surge, but also due to a fade in consumer demand.
Tags BoE consumer demand covid GBP labour market Manufacturing nfP UK GDP US Consumer Price data USD
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