GBP/USD: outlook for Dec. 19-23
12/16/2016
GBP/USD slumped to 1.2370 on the broad strengthening of the US dollar. The Fed raised its interest for the first time this year. In contrast, the Bank of England kept its benchmark unchanged and suggested that it could ease or tighten its monetary policy going forward. The main drag, however, was the bank’s projections of the moderate rise in the inflation rate. The data flow from the UK was very strong, but it didn’t help the pound to hold its positions.
Next week, keep in focus the UK current account data and quarterly final GDP. On Thursday, traders will be watching for the US unemployment claims, core durable orders, and final GDP. On Friday, keep an eye on the US new home sales release and consumer sentiment index published by the University of Michigan.
As we approach into a rather volatile quarter for the Brexit process, the sterling may weaken further. A breach of the significant support at 1.2545 put an end to the GBP growth and shifted our outlook for the currency pair to bearish. The next supports on the pound’s way to the bottom located at 1.2375, 1.2300 (November 18 low) and at 1.2250. Numerous legal hurdles towards the triggering of Article 50 and upbeat economic releases coming from the UK may help the pound to recoup its losses. The nearest resistances can be found at 1.2470, 1.2490, and 1.2580 (the lower boundary of the Ichimoku cloud on the H4 timeframe).
More:
https://fxbazooka.com/analytics/11743
12/16/2016
GBP/USD slumped to 1.2370 on the broad strengthening of the US dollar. The Fed raised its interest for the first time this year. In contrast, the Bank of England kept its benchmark unchanged and suggested that it could ease or tighten its monetary policy going forward. The main drag, however, was the bank’s projections of the moderate rise in the inflation rate. The data flow from the UK was very strong, but it didn’t help the pound to hold its positions.
Next week, keep in focus the UK current account data and quarterly final GDP. On Thursday, traders will be watching for the US unemployment claims, core durable orders, and final GDP. On Friday, keep an eye on the US new home sales release and consumer sentiment index published by the University of Michigan.
As we approach into a rather volatile quarter for the Brexit process, the sterling may weaken further. A breach of the significant support at 1.2545 put an end to the GBP growth and shifted our outlook for the currency pair to bearish. The next supports on the pound’s way to the bottom located at 1.2375, 1.2300 (November 18 low) and at 1.2250. Numerous legal hurdles towards the triggering of Article 50 and upbeat economic releases coming from the UK may help the pound to recoup its losses. The nearest resistances can be found at 1.2470, 1.2490, and 1.2580 (the lower boundary of the Ichimoku cloud on the H4 timeframe).
More:
https://fxbazooka.com/analytics/11743