British Pound in Fresh Surge; Where is the Limit?

British Pound in Fresh Surge; Where is the Limit?

26 April 2016, 19:56
Vasilii Apostolidi
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The UK’s pound sterling continues with its impressive recovery against the euro and dollar with the pair offering the best rate of exchange since early February.

GBP is on a tear higher again as markets continue to quickly unwind their Brexit-inspired negativity towards the currency.

Understanding the rally is quite simple - the British pound was sold aggressively as markets cut back on exposure ahead of the EU vote in June.

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The sell-off took sterling below fair-value levels; in short it was oversold and undervalued.

There was always the chance that this scenario would be unwound, what was up for debate was when it would happen.

Some thought the rally would come after the referendum, but the smart money always knew that you would have to catch the bottom well ahead of the vote, particularly in light of the fact that opinion polls and odds on an UK exit have not changed much.

The chances of the UK remaining in Europe are set around 70%, and it will take a great shift in favour of an exit to justify the recent lows we have seen.

"While those within the financial markets may continue to focus upon the economic merits of membership, for many voters, particularly those outside of the London bubble, the decision remains far more ‘emotional.’  Hence while the remain campaign may have had a strong start the race is by no means over, despite the interjection of Obama into the debate," says Jeremy Stretch, FX analyst withCIBC in London.

Where Next for Sterling v Dollar?

Looking at the key exchange rates we note that the pound to dollar exchange rate is now at 1.46, around about the January highs.

Two things could now happen - the pound turns lower in a move that confirms this as the upper limit of a range that it will trade ahead of the June referendum.

Or, a break above the highs will confirm a medium-term change in trend which will see the pound head back towards 1.50, a target that we set earlier this month when noting the increase in buying interest in the GBP.

“Medium term, we expect the market to continue to trade a range between 1.3850-1.35 support and 1.45-1.48 resistance. Through 1.35 there is little support till the 1.28 region. A move up through 1.48 and 1.50 would suggest the 30-year support region has again held for a gradual long-term move back towards 1.60,” says Robin Wilkins at Lloyds Bank.

Where Next for Sterling v Euro?

The pound continues to push its advance against the euro too with the euro to pound sterling exchange rate (EUR/GBP) falling to 0.7736.

Turning the equation around this translates to 1.2924 - very near to some of the targets that we have been mentioning in the forecasts we have reported of late.

Again, what we are seeing here is the potential change in trend on the pair, good news for those who are using sterling to buy euros but a ‘better act quick’ message to those using euros to buy sterling!

“Medium term, the trend from the 0.6935 lows set in July 2015 is starting to show signs of reversal. We are clearly through key daily trend supports, but we haven’t broken any major lows yet. A close through 0.7660 would be the first of these to watch for,” says Wilkins.

Then our focus will be on weekly trend support at 0.7590.

Wilkins reckons a direct rally back through 0.7950/0.80 would re-open the recent highs, while a move through 0.82 is needed to negate our underlying view for a move back towards 0.74

CIBC's Stretch believes the relief rally in GBP also has to be kept in some degree of context owing to the real possibility that the tone on the EU referendum could shift quite suddenlt.

"However, in the near term we would be wary of EUR GBP continuing to head back towards 0.7690/95, ahead of what is likely to be a disappointing UK Q1 GDP data on Thursday," says Stretch.

As alluded to, mid-week brings with it the US Federal Reserve meeting and UK GDP numbers - both of which could shift sentiment and put sterling on the back-foot again.  

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