Week ahead preview: US GDP, PCE, ECI; EZ GDP; Aus CPI; BOJ, BOC mins, CBRT 0 (0)

  • MON: German Ifo
    Survey (Apr).
  • TUE: Riksbank
    Announcement, South Korean GDP (Q1), US Richmond Fed Index (Apr), New Zealand
    Trade Balance (Mar)
  • WED: BoC
    Minutes, Australian CPI (Mar/Q1), US Durable Goods (Mar).
  • THU: CBRT
    Announcement, EZ Business Climate (Apr), US GDP Adv. (Q1)/ PCE Prices Adv.
    (Q1).
  • FRI: BoJ
    Announcement and Outlook Report, Eurogroup meeting, Japanese Tokyo CPI (Mar)/
    Retail Sales (Mar)/ Industrial Profits (Mar), French, German and Spanish Prelim
    CPI (Apr), German Unemployment (Apr), US PCE (Mar).

NOTE: Previews are listed in day-order

New Zealand Trade Balance (Tue):

There are currently no expectations for the
March Kiwi trade balance. The February Trade Balance printed at a deficit of
USD 714mln, with the desk at Westpac expecting the March Trade Balance at a
deeper deficit of USD 850mln. The desk suggests imports are starting to lose
steam on softer domestic demand.

BoC Minutes (Wed):

At its meeting, the Bank of Canada left rates
unchanged at 4.50%, as expected, and maintained language that it was prepared
to do more on rates if needed to bring inflation back to target. The average
GDP forecasts were revised higher for 2023, but down for 2024, while growth is
seen picking up again in 2025. On inflation, the 2023 average CPI forecast was
revised lower, while 2024 was left unchanged. The statement noted that getting
inflation to 2% could be more difficult as expectations are coming down only
slowly, while service price inflation and wage growth remain elevated, and
corporate pricing behaviour has yet to normalise. The central bank also lowered
its output gap estimate, though left its neutral rate view unchanged. At his
post meeting press conference, Governor Macklem revealed that the Governing
Council discussed whether it had raised rates enough, but said that the full
work through of prior hikes was not yet done. Officials also considered the
likelihood that rates may need to remain restrictive for longer to return
inflation to target. The Governor also pushed back on market pricing for rate
cuts, saying that does not look like the most likely scenario. Analysts at
Oxford Economics now expect rates to be left unchanged throughout 2023, noting
their CPI forecasts are aligned with the BoC, but they see much weaker GDP
growth in 2023 than the BoC expects.

Australia CPI (Wed):

Q/Q Q1 CPI is seen cooling to 1.3% from 1.9%
in Q4 last year, but the Y/Y rate is expected to have ticked higher to 6.9%
from 6.8%. Meanwhile, the Trimmed Mean CPI is forecast at 1.4% Q/Q (prev.
1.7%), and Y/Y at 6.7% (prev. 6.9%). Weighted Mean CPI is seen at 1.3% Q/Q
(prev. 1.6%) and Y/Y at 1.3% (prev. 1.6%). Last quarter, the largest upward
contributions came from domestic and international holiday travel alongside
energy prices. Analysts at Westpac suggest the expected downticks in Q/Q
metrics “is due to an ongoing moderation in inflation for food, a seasonal
decline in clothing & footwear, a further moderation in dwellings and
household contents & services inflation, as well as falling prices for auto
fuel and audio visual & computing equipment.” Regarding the RBA, the
minutes released this month stated that the Board considered a rate hike at the
April policy meeting before deciding to pause, as it agreed on a stronger case
to pause and reassess the need for further tightening at future meetings,
whilst highlighting that Inflation is still too high and the labour market has
loosened a little, but remains very tight. As a reminder, the RBA held rates at
3.60%, as expected and heavily priced in the money markets, although analysts
were near-evenly split between expectations for a 25bps hike and a pause.

Riksbank Announcement (Wed):

Expected to hike the Key Policy Rate by 50bp
to 3.50%, 96% of respondents to SEB’s survey expect such a magnitude while the
remainder look for 25bp. The 50bp increment is merited by CPIF-XE remaining
above target and stubbornly elevated in tandem with the domestic economy
generally faring relatively well. Such a move would follow the 50bp hike in
February, which was accompanied by guidance for another hike of either 25bp or
50bp in April. While inflation remains above-target, the March release was
cooler-than-expected for the core measure and was accompanied by a marked
easing in the headline rate to 8.3% from 9.4%. A dynamic which could be used to
justify a discussion, or perhaps even a vote for, a more modest 25bp rate rise
by the more dovish members. On this, the domestic Trade and Enterprise unions
have called for rates to be left unchanged, citing the recent prudent wage
agreement and non-expansionary government budget. Overall, expected to hike by
50bp, though a discussion around and/or vote(s) for other magnitudes cannot be
ruled out; albeit, the likes of SEB and Nordea expect another hike in June to a
3.75% peak given inflation. Additionally, the statement will likely keep emphasis
on SEK appreciation as being “desirable”.

CBRT Announcement (Thu):

The consensus is for the CBRT to leave its
One-Week Repo Rate unchanged, at 8.50% in April. At its previous meeting, the
central bank noted stronger economic activity and caveated its views with
concerns of recession in developed economies. The CBRT reiterated it is to use
all instruments decisively for price stability and the medium-term 5% inflation
target, whilst suggesting the transparent, predictable, and data-driven
decision-making framework is to continue. Traders will continue to frame the
CBRT meeting in the context of the upcoming May 14th elections. Ahead of the
confab, and the elections, SocGen notes traders‘ chatter that the central bank
has tightened its grip on the currency ahead of the election, is now tracking
and vetting TRY exchange rates and has requested detailed reports on FX
valuations. Analysts have suggested that the CBRT may return to more
conventional monetary policy strategies after the election is out of the way, and
will be forced to lift rates. The most recent central bank poll found the Repo
Rate is seen at 13.75% in 12-months time; previously, the view was for 12.8%.

BoC Minutes (Wed):

At its meeting, the Bank of Canada left rates
unchanged at 4.50%, as expected, and maintained language that it was prepared
to do more on rates if needed to bring inflation back to target. The average
GDP forecasts were revised higher for 2023, but down for 2024, while growth is
seen picking up again in 2025. On inflation, the 2023 average CPI forecast was
revised lower, while 2024 was left unchanged. The statement noted that getting
inflation to 2% could be more difficult as expectations are coming down only
slowly, while service price inflation and wage growth remain elevated, and
corporate pricing behaviour has yet to normalise. The central bank also lowered
its output gap estimate, though left its neutral rate view unchanged. At his
post meeting press conference, Governor Macklem revealed that the Governing
Council discussed whether it had raised rates enough, but said that the full
work through of prior hikes was not yet done. Officials also considered the
likelihood that rates may need to remain restrictive for longer to return
inflation to target. The Governor also pushed back on market pricing for rate
cuts, saying that does not look like the most likely scenario. Analysts at
Oxford Economics now expect rates to be left unchanged throughout 2023, noting
their CPI forecasts are aligned with the BoC, but they see much weaker GDP
growth in 2023 than the BoC expects

US Advanced GDP (Thu):

The rate of US GDP growth is expected to cool
in Q1, with the consensus looking for the first estimate of 2023 output to show
growth of 2.0% Q/Q (prev. +2.6%). At the time of writing, the Atlanta Fed’s
forecasting model is tracking growth of 2.5% in Q1. However, in recent weeks,
many sell-side nowcasting models have been moving lower. And ahead, the rate of
growth is expected to cool further. At its March meeting, the Federal Reserve
trimmed its growth view for 2023 as a whole, and now projects GDP at 0.4% from
its prior view of 0.5%. For now, the Fed continues to prioritise inflation in
its policymaking, so while traditionally traders might expect weak growth data
to generate a dovish response, that may not be seen until prices have come back
down further towards target. Nevertheless, money markets are still pricing at
least one full 25bps rate cut, and around 50% chance of another later this
year, after a 25bps rate rise in May.

BoJ Announcement And Outlook Report (Fri):

The Bank of Japan will conduct its first
policy meeting under the leadership of newly appointed Governor Ueda next week,
which will also be the first meeting for Deputy Governors Uchida and Himino,
with the central bank expected to maintain current monetary policy settings of
rates at -0.10% and QQE with YCC to flexibly target 10yr JGB yields at 0%
within a +/- 50bps tolerance range, according to 24 out of 27 economists
surveyed by Reuters. Comments from the new officials have suggested no hurry to
exit from ultra-easy policy as Ueda stated during his inaugural speeches last
week that the BoJ will continue monetary easing until the price target is
stably and sustainably achieved and noted that domestic consumer inflation is
currently around 3%, but likely to slow ahead. Furthermore, Governor Ueda
warned against a sudden normalisation of policy and Deputy Governor Uchida also
said they will continue monetary easing to achieve the price stability target
sustainably and stably, while other officials said they are not expecting an
abrupt shift in policy under the new Governor. Nonetheless, participants will
be on the lookout for potential clues about when the central bank could begin
normalisation as most economists cited by Bloomberg expect some sort of policy
shift by June, although some have warned that the BoJ could maintain policy
well into Q2. Meanwhile, recent data releases have been mixed which supports a
patient approach, including the quarterly Tankan survey as the large manufacturers’
sentiment index deteriorated for the 5th consecutive quarter and fell to its
lowest since December 2020, but the large non-manufacturers sentiment index
printed at its highest in more than 3 years. Furthermore, household spending
disappointed, but machinery orders topped forecasts and the latest national
inflation metrics matched largely consensus, with headline CPI at 3.2% and Core
CPI at 3.1%, but showed an acceleration in nationwide Ex. Fresh Food &
Energy CPI to 3.8% (prev. 3.5%). The central bank will also release its latest
Outlook Report containing Board members’ median forecasts for Real GDP and Core
CPI, with the current estimates for growth at 1.9%, 1.7% and 1.1% for fiscal
years 2022, 2023 and 2024, respectively, while inflation is seen at 3.0%, 1.6%
and 1.8% for the respective aforementioned years. In addition, a recent press
report stated that the central bank is mulling CPI projections for FY25 between
1.6%-1.9%, which would remain below the 2% price goal and support the case for
a delayed exit from easy policy.

Tokyo CPI (Fri):

Core Tokyo CPI is expected to have eased to
3.1% from 3.3% amid stabilising energy prices and base effects. The release is
seen as a leading indicator of the national metrics due a couple of weeks
later. Last month Core consumer inflation in Tokyo slowed for the second
consecutive month, but remained well above the central bank’s 2% target. The
slowdown was primarily due to government measures to curb utility costs.
However, the core came in at the fastest year-on-year pace since 1990. That was
also reflected in the national metrics released recently – with the Core CPI
Y/Y rising to 3.8% from the prior 3.5%, and above the forecast of 3.4%. Sources
via Reuters suggested the BoJ is likely to maintain ultra-loose monetary policy
and make no change to interest rate targets and the yield tolerance band at its
meeting next week, and will likely maintain dovish guidance and could discuss
adjusting the reference on COVID-19 in coming meetings. This follows reports
the BoJ is reportedly open to tweaking Yield Curve Control (YCC) this year if
wage momentum holds, according to Reuters sources; may engage in more lively
debate at June and July meetings; but there is no current consensus on how soon
to phase YCC out, with the July wage tally reportedly key.

Eurozone GDP (Fri):

Prelim Q1 GDP data for the Eurozone is
expected to show Q/Q growth of 0.1% (vs. prev. 0.0%) with the Y/Y rate at 1.3%
(vs. prev. 1.8%). Ahead of the upcoming release, analysts at Investec note that
“over the winter period the macroeconomic story from the Euro area has been
it’s better-than-expected performance” whereby fears of a winter recession have
been averted thanks to milder weather and a subsequently better energy
backdrop. Investec states that surveys such as the PMIs “have pointed to a
continued pickup in the services sector”, whilst “industrial output has grown
1.0% and 1.5% (m/m) in January and February respectively and hence looks set to
record positive growth on the quarter”. Accordingly, the desk looks for a small
Q/Q increase of 0.1%. As ever, GDP data will be deemed as stale in some
quarters with traders more mindful of recent PMI metrics, whereby data for
April highlighted the differing fortunes for the manufacturing and services
sectors, with the former delving deeper into contractionary territory and the
latter moving further above the 50 mark. On which, ING concludes the data
„sheds a positive light on the economic performance in the eurozone, as a
pickup in service sector activity is boosting growth“. From a policy
perspective, inflation data and the Bank Lending Survey released ahead of the
May meeting will likely carry greater sway over the upcoming decision whereby
25bps is priced at 68% and 50bps at 32%.

US PCE (Fri):

The consensus expects core PCE to rise 0.3%
M/M in March, matching the prior rate; the annual measure is seen easing by
0.1ppts to 4.5% Y/Y. The data is likely to confirm that the process of gradual
disinflation continued in March, Credit Suisse says, but the core run rate is
still set to remain higher than the Fed’s target. „The CPI release
indicated that core goods prices edged higher in March, however, modest
disinflation in shelter, which is a smaller weight in the PCE than CPI, should
offset most of this so that the monthly inflation rate stays flat,“ CS
writes.

US Employment Costs (Fri):

The data is said to be one of the key measures
that Fed officials look to when assessing longer-term remuneration trends;
officials have indicated that they want to see a slowdown in wage inflation,
amongst other things, in order to help bring down the rate of services
inflation. „We expect that the ECI will show a continued modest slowdown
in the pace of wage gains as the quit rate has eased in recent months,“
Moody’s says. There has been sequential easing in this measure over the course
of the last few reports (1.4% in Q1 2022, 1.3% in Q2, 1.2% in Q3, and 1.0% in
Q4), although that trend may be tested, if the consensus view is anything to go
by: analysts are currently looking for a rise of 1.1% Q/Q in Q1 (prev. +1.0%).

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This article was written by Newsquawk Analysis at www.forexlive.com.

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Fed’s Cook: Wage growth and hiring have slowed down 0 (0)

The Fed blackout starts at midnight but there’s always a race to get in the last word:

  • Welcomes moderation in housing-related inflation
  • High inflation as become embedded in the economy
  • Job market still strong but there are signs of cooling
  • Inflation pressures have been abating but core prices still sticky
  • March PCE inflation likely to moderate to 4%
  • Path back to 2% likely to be uneven and bumpy
  • We’re trying to figure out where the Fed needs to stop with rate rises
  • Continued economic strength and slower disinflation could push the Fed to do more
  • Monetary policy moving into a more uncertain phase

These are relatively dovish comments and work well with a one-and-done scenario where the Fed wants some time to wait and see how the economy evolves.

The March PCE inflation report is due out on Friday.

This article was written by Adam Button at www.forexlive.com.

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Forexlive Americas FX news wrap: US dollar jumps on PMI but later gives it back 0 (0)

Markets:

  • S&P 500 flat at 4155
  • WTI crude oil up $0.43 to $77.80
  • US 10-year yields up 2.3 bps to 3.568%
  • Gold down $22 to $1982
  • EUR leads, CAD lags

The daily changes in the largest currencies on Friday were minimal but the day wasn’t without drama. In particular, the US PMI from S&P Global led to a sharp rally in the US dollar, including 100 pips in USD/JPY and half that in EUR/USD and GBP/USD. The report was surprisingly strong including high numbers on new orders and price pressures that few people saw coming.

Some skepticism set in after the numbers though and the dollar move faded. Ultimately, the dollar rally completely reversed (and more) against the euro and pound. USD/JPY held onto about 60 pips of gains from the low but that was still not enough to erase the losses from European trading.

There mood in the markets is uncertainty right now. For every data point that indicates a recession, there is one that shows the economy on solid ground. This week a soft Philly Fed cranked up the recession talk again only for it to be undercut by the number today. Next week there is another round of data but the market is less likely to be swayed by second-tier data points unless a few run in the same direction.

One worrisome sign was the underperformance of commodity currencies. It came despite gains in oil, though copper was down slightly and gold fell 1%. Some pointed to softer global manufacturing PMIs today as a worrisome sign for global resource demand and that could have been a factor.

The loonie was especially soft but that owes to weak details in the Canadian retail sales report. I’ll repost here what I told Reuters.

„High mortgage rates are starting to bite Canadians‘ wallets,“ said Adam Button, chief currency analyst at ForexLive. „Canada is particularly sensitive to higher interest rates and that will lead to divergence in U.S. and Canadian economic performance in the second quarter and beyond.“

This article was written by Adam Button at www.forexlive.com.

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Major US indices close little changed.Low to high trading ranges are the lowest since 2021 0 (0)

The markets traded in relatively narrow trading range today and for the week.

Looking at the low to high trading ranges for the major indices:

  • The NASDAQ index range for the week was only 258 points. That was the lowest range since December 2021.
  • The S&P index range for the week was 55.62 points. That is the lowest range going back to November 2021.
  • The Dow Jones industrial average range of 340.88 points was its lowest range going back to August 2021.

That’s not a lot of movement. The market is non-trending, but a slew of earnings (Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Boeing, McDonald’s, Intel, GM, 3M, Southwest air, etc.) next week will likely lead to something bigger and better next week. So be aware. Be prepared.

In trading today today, the major indices are closing with modest gains. The final numbers are showing:

  • Dow industrial average was 22.45 points or 0.07% at 33809.10
  • S&P index up 3.73 points or 0.09% at 4133.53
  • NASDAQ index of 12.89 points or 0.11% at 12072.45
  • Russell 2000 rose 1.808 points or 0.10% at 1791.50

For the trading week, all the major indices closed lower:

  • Dow industrial average fell -0.23%. The decline was the 1st decline after 4 weeks of gains.
  • S&P index fell -0.10%
  • NASDAQ index fell -0.42%
  • Russell 2000 bucked the trend with a gain of 0.58%

This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.

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BOE’s Ramsden: High inflation is a bigger risk tthan over-tightening 0 (0)

  • Need to make sure that monetary inflation doesn’t develop
  • I’m focused on staying the course on tightening
  • Domestically driven inflation pressure remains

The market has priced in 70 bps more of tightening through September, including an 89% chance of 25 bps on May 11.

This article was written by Adam Button at www.forexlive.com.

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Earnings calendar for next week highlighted by Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, Alphabet, Intel. 0 (0)

Next week is arguably the biggest one for the earnings for the quarter. There are a number of big cap companies on the calendar, with the potential to surprise and send stock prices higher or lower Moreover with the economy sitting on the fence (soft landing? hard landing? no landing?), forecast for forward earnings will also be dissected by market traders.

Below is a list of the major announcements by day:

Monday, April 24

  • Whirlpool
  • Coca-Cola
  • First Republic Bank

Tuesday, April 25

  • Microsoft
  • Alphabet
  • 3M
  • GM
  • UPS
  • McDonald’s

Wednesday, April 26

  • Meta
  • Boeing
  • Hilton
  • Mattel
  • eBay
  • Norfork Southern

Thursday, April 27

  • Amazon
  • Intel
  • Caterpillar
  • Merck
  • Southwest Airlines

Friday, April 28

  • Chevron
  • Exxon Mobil
  • Colgate-Palmolive
  • Sony

This article was written by Greg Michalowski at www.forexlive.com.

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ForexLive European FX news wrap: Mixed markets going into the final stretch of the week 0 (0)

Headlines:

Markets:

  • JPY leads, AUD lags on the day
  • European equities lower; S&P 500 futures down 0.2%
  • US 10-ear yields down 1 bps to 3.535%
  • Gold down 0.9% to $1,987.33
  • WTI crude up 0.3% to $77.35
  • Bitcoin down 0.6% to $28,028

It was a mixed trading session for the most part, with markets not really following much of a theme.

In terms of data, UK retail sales disappointed once again and that is keeping the pound pressured. Meanwhile, euro area PMI data saw a contrast between services and manufacturing activity but on the balance of things, it points to a more solid recovery in economic conditions in the region.

That failed to really light a spark in the euro though, as it mainly just reaffirms the ECB’s current policy conviction. That said, EUR/USD is keeping steady around 1.0975 and is up from around 1.0945 earlier in the session.

GBP/USD is a laggard, slipping from around 1.2430 to 1.2380 before keeping around 1.2390 levels at the moment. USD/JPY traded more sideways as Treasury yields are holding slightly lower on the day, with the pair hovering around 133.80 to 134.00 mostly.

The antipodeans are also holding lower, with AUD/USD down 0.7% to just under 0.6700 upon a rejection of its 200-day moving average at 0.6741 with AUD/JPY also trading back under 90.00 on a rejection of its own 100-day moving average.

Elsewhere, equities were sluggish throughout as the back and forth action this week is leaving traders with little appetite it would seem. European indices are slightly lower after a flattish open while US futures are also just slightly lower, adding a little to yesterday’s retreat.

In other markets, gold is keeping lower by nearly 1% to $1,987 as the state of flux in and around the $2,000 mark continues to play out. Meanwhile, WTI nudged lower initially to test its 100-day moving average at $76.80 before climbing back up to $77.35 now and holding marginally higher on the day.

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

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Nasdaq Composite Technical Analysis 0 (0)

On the daily chart below for the Nasdaq, we can
see that the market consolidated just below the key 12274 resistance. The moving
averages
are still crossed to the upside keeping the bullish trend intact, but
they are starting to converge as the rangebound price action has been going on
for almost a month now.

The latest economic data are not
supportive for the bulls as the US
Retail Sales
missed expectations across the board and the Jobless
Claims
keep showing increases week after week. Today the market will focus on
the US PMIs and if those miss expectations
as well, then we may see the trend turning around.

Nasdaq
technical analysis

On the 4 hour chart below, we can
see more closely the consolidation below the key resistance. The moving
averages on this timeframe have crossed to the downside, although they are not
a reliable signal in a range.

The market is still uncertain
where to go next, so the economic data will be very important. The buyers will
need to see benign data, while the sellers will want to see more deterioration.

On the 1 hour chart below, we can
see the clear range created just below the key resistance. Generally, it’s best
to sit out when the market starts ranging and wait for a clear breakout
supported by a fundamental catalyst. Today we have the US PMIs so we may have a
catalyst, but the price will also need to break on either side before the
buyers and sellers can join.

A miss in the data with the price
breaking lower would give the sellers conviction to pile in and target the
swing low at 11650. A beat and the price breaking above the top of the range
will give the buyers conviction to jump onboard and target the next resistance
at 13100.

This article was written by ForexLive at www.forexlive.com.

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ECB’s Rehn warns against early withdrawal of restrictive monetary policy 0 (0)

  • We have moved policy to an area that restricts aggregate demand
  • There is no reason for us to abandon it or exit it prematurely
  • The path to sustainable growth is narrow
  • But it can be traversed with a proactive, balanced policy

As they are still on the path of tightening policy further to guard against high inflation, these remarks are pretty much just a supportive element. If and when price pressures do ease and they can start to look at pausing, the narrative can quickly switch around especially if economic conditions worsen rapidly.

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

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Cable holds lower as dollar keeps slightly firmer on the session 0 (0)

The pound is doing that thing where it is following the action in commodity currencies again today, with it being one of the worst performing major currencies alongside the antipodeans. GBP/USD is now down 0.5% to 1.2380, sitting near the lows for the day.

The pair had already come under pressure from the softer UK retail sales data earlier and that is perhaps doing a number on the pound today as well. And with the dollar seen firmer across the board (except against the yen), that is seeing cable under a bit of pressure in European trading.

That said, in the big picture, the pair is still very much caught in a bit of a bind between support closer to 1.2345 and the 1.2500 mark for the time being:

And if you zoom out to the weekly chart, one can argue that the pair is essentially caught in between key support (6 January low) near 1.1840 and key resistance (14 December high) around 1.2446 for now.

That pretty much outlines a sort of confined trading range for cable in the grand scheme of things, until we get a firm break on one side or the other.

It doesn’t really help that the BOE is still being forced to hike that little bit more while markets are at the same time expecting the Fed to relent and head to the sidelines after May.

That is putting both dollar and pound sentiment sort of in the same basket when it comes to central bank outlook. The lack of policy divergence isn’t really helping to give a clear shot for traders as they take aim at GBP/USD.

This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.

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