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The GBP trader - the concerning message the rates markets portrays about the UK

Chris Weston
Chris Weston
Head of Research
May 17, 2022
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As I scan down and ponder the craziness priced into interest rate markets over the next three years and how this affects currencies, I cast the eye to what’s priced between 2023 to 2024.

Granted, that’s a long way off and forecasting is incredibly hard at the best of times – but the market does what it does – it assesses the distribution of probabilities and weights them accordingly.

Number of hikes/cuts priced (in basis points) in 2024

Preview

(Source: Pepperstone - Past performance is not indicative of future performance.)

What's interesting is the market pricing in UK rates in 2024. Granted, the MPC has been outspoken as any on the ever-growing risks of stagflation. We’re now being told the BoE may not indeed proceed with QT and asset sales if conditions became difficult - subsequently becoming the first G10 central bank to install the conditions for a genuine policy pivot.

BoE Gov Bailey is clearly worried about the unfolding food crises in the UK and Brexit is not only contributing to inflation but has deeply impacted UK trade, notably, SME export volumes. We’ve still got to fully price Downing Street amending parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol and reigniting tensions with Europe.

Weekly CFTC report – non-commercial account short 79k contracts

Preview

(Source: Bloomberg - Past performance is not indicative of future performance.)

The UK holds the deepest negative real (inflation-adjusted) bond yields, a factor which comes and goes as a headwind, keeping the GBP suppressed. However, when we mix in deteriorating growth prospects, very high and sticky inflation and rising political concerns, and a central bank who not started its hiking cycle earlier than others, but may look to end it sooner and you can see why leveraged funds have been sellers of GBP and why we see non-commercial GBP positioning (CFTC report) at -79k contracts, not far off the record lows seen in 2019 (-108k contracts).

The consensus (median) forecast from FX strategists for end-Q2 is 1.2600, but I wouldn’t read too much into that. The question we hear more about is whether a new bout of USD strength can take GBPUSD through 1.2000? Using a basic options distribution model, I see the current implied probability of reaching 1.2000 in a month at 16.8% - so the market sees it as a tail event but it’s by no means out of the question – this probability pushes to 25% if we take the time frame out to 3 months.

The questions I ask then:

  • With the market so short of GBP what could cause a lasting short squeeze, or is this a taste of more to come?
  • Could GBP shorts be the best hedge against a further global economic downturn? Is that what the increasingly growing rate cut position 2024 is portraying?

It certainly feels to me that both the rates pricing for 2024 and increasing net short positioning are telling us that if we’re looking for an area of increasing concern it’s the UK. Until equity markets see a sustained upturn the idea of targeting 1.2000 and below in the coming months seems a solid risk.


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