The recent GBP underperformance is largely due to a less hawkish BoE and sluggish domestic activity data but its underperformance is unlikely to continue in the light of a rebound in global risk sentiment and improving domestic dynamics, economists at HSBC report.
“With inflation in the UK having likely peaked and potentially set to decelerate more than consensus expects, a less aggressive tightening tone from the BoE now may mean a less abrupt turn of stance later in the year, which may end up becoming a marginal positive for the GBP in the months ahead. A shift towards better-than-expected domestic data should also be positive for the GBP.”
“The UK’s external rebalancing continues at pace, due to the combination of a cheaper currency and higher interest rates. Indeed, the UK’s trade balance for 3Q22 showed the narrowest deficit since December 2021. This may bode well for the GBP.”
“GBP has a very strong tie to global risk appetite in recent years. A bottoming out in global growth dynamics (compared to excessively pessimistic expectations), as well as a peak in global interest rates on the back of softening inflation pressure could allow the GBP to strengthen against the USD in an environment where risk appetite looks less febrile.”