Trading the News: Bank of England Inflation Reportt
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, 11-12-2014 at 05:48 AM (1746 Views)
- Bank of England (BoE) Widely Expected to Reduce Growth, Inflation Forecast.
- Will the BoE Inflation Report Drag on Interest-Rate Expectations?
Trading the News: Bank of England (BoE) Inflation Report
Trading the Bank of England (BoE) Inflation report may not be clear cut even with expectations for a downward revision in the central bank’s growth/inflation forecast as Governor Mark Carney continues to prepare U.K. households and businesses for higher borrowing-costs.
What’s Expected:
Why Is This Event Important:
The fresh batch of central bank rhetoric may continue to drag on interest rate expectations as the majority of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) remains in no rush to normalize monetary policy, but the BoE may stick to its current course to raise the benchmark interest rate in 2015 amid the ongoing recovery in the real economy.
Expectations: Bearish Argument/Scenario
Release Expected Actual Retail Sales ex Auto (MoM) (SEP) 0.0% -0.3% Consumer Price Index Core (YoY) (SEP) 1.8% 1.5% Producer Price Index Core- Output n.s.a. (YoY) (SEP) 0.9% 0.8%
Easing inflation along with the slowing consumption may encourage the BoE to adopt a more dovish tone for monetary policy, and GBP/USD may continue to carve lower highs & lows throughout the remainder of the year should the central bank scale back its willingness to remove the highly accommodative policy stance.
Risk: Bullish Argument/Scenario
Release Expected Actual Manufacturing Production (MoM) (SEP) 0.3% 0.4% ILO Unemployment Rate (3M) (AUG) 6.1% 6.0% Average Weekly Earnings ex. Bonus (AUG) 0.8% 0.9%
However, the BoE may largely retain an upbeat view for the U.K. economy amid the rise in business outputs paired with the ongoing improvement in the labor market, and the British Pound may continue to pare the losses carried over from the previous month should the fresh batch of central bank commentary prop up interest rate expectations.
How To Trade This Event Risk
Bearish GBP Trade: Interest Rate Expectations Falter as BoE Cuts Economic Forecast
- Need red, five-minute candle following the GDP print to consider a short British Pound trade
- If market reaction favors bearish sterling trade, short GBP/USD with two separate position
- Set stop at the near-by swing high/reasonable distance from entry; look for at least 1:1 risk-to-reward
- Move stop to entry on remaining position once initial target is hit, set reasonable limit
Bullish GBP Trade: MPC Stays on Course to Raise Interest Rate in 2015
- Need green, five-minute candle to favor a long GBP/USD trade
- Implement same setup as the bearish British Pound trade, just in reverse
Potential Price Targets For The Release
GBP/USD Daily Chart
- Downside targets remain favored as GBP/USD continues to carve lower-highs while RSI fails to establish bullish trend.
- Interim Resistance: 1.5980 (100% expansion) to 1.6000 (50.0% retracement)
- Interim Support: 1.5720 (61.8% retracement) to 1.5740 (38.2% expansion)
Impact that the U.K. GDP report has had on GBP during the last release
Period Data Released Estimate Actual Pips Change
(1 Hour post event )Pips Change
(End of Day post event)AUG 2014 08/13/2014 9:30 GMT -- -- -80 -125
In the latest Inflation Report, the Bank of England (BoE) raised its 2014 growth forecast to 3.5% from 3.4%, but went onto say that now is not the time for a U.K. rate increase as the central bank slashes its wage growth outlook. Indeed, BoE Governor Mark Carney stated that the forward-guidance for monetary policy remains unchanged amid the reduction in spare capacity, but concerns over weak wage growth, muted exports and heightening geopolitical tensions may continue to dampen the appeal of the British Pound as it drags on interest rate expectations. The sterling tumbled lower on the back of the relative dovish BoE statement, with GBP/USD slipping below the 1.6700 handle during the North America trade to close at a low of 1.6678.
--- Written by David Song, Currency Analyst and Shuyang Ren
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