The GBP/USD pair stages a modest bounce from its lowest level since March 2020, around the 1.1445 area touched earlier this Monday. Spot prices hit a fresh daily high during the mid-European session, albeit seemed to struggle to capitalize on the move or find acceptance above the 1.1500 psychological mark.
The US dollar trims a part of its early gains to a fresh two-decade high and turns out to be a key factor offering some support to the GBP/USD pair. That said, expectations that the Fed will stick to its aggressive policy tightening path act as a tailwind for the greenback. Apart from this, a bleak outlook for the UK economy continue to undermine the British pound and kept a lid on any meaningful gains for the major.
It is worth recalling that the Bank of England had warned last month that the UK economy will enter a prolonged recession during the last quarter of the year. Adding to this, the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) downgraded its forecast and now expects the UK economy to record three consecutive quarters of contraction. This, to a larger extent, overshadows the prospects for further interest rate hikes by the UK central bank.
On the UK political front, Liz Truss won the Conservative Party leadership race to become the next British Prime Minister. The news, however, did little to impress bullish traders, suggesting that the path of least resistance for the GBP/USD pair is to the downside. That said, relatively lighter trading volumes on the back of the Labor Day holiday in the US might hold back traders from placing aggressive bearish bets and limit losses.
Nevertheless, the fundamental backdrop still supports prospects for an extension of a three-week-old downward trajectory. Even from a technical perspective, acceptance below the 1.1500 mark and the GBP/USD pair's inability to attract any buyers suggests that the near-term selling bias is still far from being over. Hence, any attempted recovery move could be seen as a selling opportunity and runs the risk of fizzling out rather quickly.
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