GBP/USD (GBPUSD) is up 0.54% at Jul 15 10:35(ET), now at $1.34569, with a 7-day up of 0.53%.

The upward momentum in GBPUSD is primarily driven by a repricing of the Federal Reserve's policy path following disappointing US macroeconomic data, which has coincided with a shift in the UK’s relative interest rate advantage. Softer than anticipated US retail sales and cooling consumption indicators have fueled expectations that the Fed may need to adopt a more accommodative stance to prevent a sharper economic slowdown. This has led to a broad-based decline in US Treasury yields, particularly at the front end of the curve, narrowing the yield differential that previously favored the dollar.
On the British side, the pound is finding support from the Bank of England’s relatively hawkish posture. While other major central banks have moved toward a more aggressive easing cycle, the BoE remains focused on the persistence of domestic services inflation and robust wage growth. Market participants are increasingly betting that the BoE will maintain higher terminal rates for longer than the Fed, a divergence that fundamentally alters the carry trade appeal in favor of sterling. The sterling’s resilience is further bolstered by signs of a stabilizing UK manufacturing sector, which has differentiated the UK’s growth outlook from the more pronounced slowdown seen in parts of the Eurozone and the US.
The move is also being amplified by a broader improvement in global risk appetite. As a pro-cyclical currency, the pound typically outperforms the greenback during periods of dollar weakness and rising equity markets. Institutional capital flows suggest that investors are rotating out of safe-haven dollar positions and into higher-beta assets as volatility in the sovereign bond markets begins to subside. This shift in sentiment has triggered technical buying as GBPUSD cleared significant psychological resistance levels, forcing a liquidation of short positions held by macro hedge funds.
Looking ahead, the sustainability of this move appears to be supported by the shifting macro divergence between the US and the UK. Investors remain sensitive to any rhetoric from the Bank of England that might signal a pivot, but until the UK’s inflation trajectory shows a more convincing alignment with target levels, the pound is likely to maintain its yield-driven edge. The key risk to this trend remains a potential resurgence in US inflationary pressures or a geopolitical shock that would reignite safe-haven demand for the dollar. For now, the combination of a cooling US economy and a restrictive BoE policy remains the dominant catalyst for the pair's appreciation.
Technically, GBP/USD (GBPUSD) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of 0.004, indicating a neutral signal. The RSI at 60.354 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 1.657 suggests overbought condition. Please monitor closely.

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