With American data still on hold after the recently resolved shutdown of the government, many traders’ focus shifted in the first half of November to Britain amid a number of key releases, including the job report and GDP. Despite generally negative results with GDP lower than expected and unemployment rising to 5%, the pound hasn’t lost strength consistently except against the euro. This article summarises the latest British data, then looks briefly at the charts of GBPUSD and EURGBP.

11 November’s British job report was significantly weaker than expected, with claimant count change up more than the consensus and employment surprisingly rising to 5%:

September’s British unemployment is the highest in more than four years and the second consecutive higher figure. Combined with the claimant count change for October rising about 29,000 against around 20,000 expected, the latest job report suggests that Britain’s labour market is weakening, which might give some rationale for the Bank of England to continue cutting rates in December. However, there was a large downward revision to last month’s claimant count change from about 26,000 to only 400.

Preliminary quarterly British GDP on Thursday, 13 November, was a hotly anticipated release both for its potential effects on the BoE’s future policy and, crucially, the Chancellor’s upcoming Autumn statement. While it doesn’t show contraction, GDP grew less than expected:

Production was one of the biggest areas contracting last quarter, contributing to the consensus of 0.2% growth being missed, as production of vehicles especially tanked amid the major cyberattack on Jaguar Land Rover PLC. Annually, GDP rose 1.3%, slightly lower than the consensus of 1.4%.

Although none of the major releases in the week to 14 November from the UK were extremely bad and some minor ones, like business investment and goods trade balance, were less bad than expected, earlier predictions of lacklustre performance by the British economy seem to be broadly correct. This is potentially a challenge for the pound further ahead, but in the immediate future, it seems that political instability around the expected tax hikes this month might be priced in.

For many weeks now, traders have regularly been reading about the government’s fiscal rules: sentiment seems to be slightly positive or at least neutral on Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ determination to follow these rules and most likely hike taxes on middle and higher earners. Obviously, that’s likely to challenge growth further, but for many, the memory of Liz Truss’ disastrous premiership remains fresh. Traders should prepare for high volatility around the budget on 26 November.



Source link

Shares:
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *