The UK’s Office for National Statistics (ONS) will release the advanced prints of the Q4 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) on Thursday.
At the Bank of England's (BoE) latest gathering, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) anticipates a slow but steady uptick in GDP growth over the upcoming quarters.
If GDP prints meet markets’ consensus, the UK economy would have entered into a “technical recession” following the 0.1% contraction recorded in the previous quarter.
In addition, BoE’s officials suggested that approximately two-thirds of the effect of heightened interest rates on GDP levels have already materialized.
According to investors’ projections, the BoE is expected to be one of the latest central banks to start reducing its policy rates. On this, while traders see the Federal Reserve (Fed) and the European Central Bank (ECB) cutting rates around the summer, the “Old Lady” is seen kicking off its easing cycle later in the year, with the September meeting being a likely candidate.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) reported that the UK economy contracted 0.1% QoQ in the previous quarter, compared with the 0.2% gain posted in the April-June period of the previous year. In the three months to December, the economy is expected to have also contracted 0.1%.
In its latest meeting, the BoE downgraded its forecast for economic growth and now expects GDP to come in flat in Q1 2024.
At present, the UK's Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation continues to rank among the highest within prominent global economies. As indicated by the most recent ONS report, in January, the headline CPI experienced a year-on-year increase of 4.0%, holding steady from the December reading. Meanwhile, the core CPI remained sticky and rose 5.1% year-on-year.
The UK will release the Q4 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) flash estimate on Thursday, February 15, at 7:00 GMT. The economy is expected to have shrunk 0.1% in the three months to December. On a monthly basis, the GDP is foreseen to contract by 0.2% in December, declining from 0.3% expansion in November.
In January, inflation in the UK turned out to be lower than anticipated, with inflationary pressures showing less of an increase than both markets and the BoE had expected. The CPI figures prompted a reassessment of expectations regarding the central bank’s intentions to start trimming its policy rate and market participants now see the likelihood of 75 bps rate cuts this year.
Pablo Piovano, US Session Manager and Senior Analyst at FXStreet, says: “Breaching the 2024 low of 1.2518, recorded on February 5, exposes GBP/USD to further losses to, initially, the December 2023 bottom of 1.2500 seen on December 13. The breakdown of this region could prompt a potential test of the weekly low of 1.2187 printed on November 10, 2023, to re-emerge on the horizon. On the other hand, the weekly top at 1.2683 seen on February 13 should offer initial resistance and is considered the latest defence for a probable climb to the 2024 peak at 1.2785 clocked on January 12.”
Piovano adds: “A convincing breach of the key 200-day SMA, today at 1.2562, should open the door to the continuation of the downward bias, at least in the near-term horizon.”
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