Search
SVG Down
Language
Hi, user_no_name
Live Chat

Sterling stable as UK general election announced for July

 

Sterling steady as Sunak calls UK general election on July 4

Pound sterling held steady near multi-month highs against the U.S. dollar on Thursday, following British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's call for a snap UK general election on July 4 and data showing that April inflation slowed less than expected.

Sterling ticked up against the dollar at $1.2745 (a gain of 0.22%), after reaching a two-month high of $1.2761 the previous day. The rise followed data indicating that UK consumer prices increased by 2.3% annually in April, close to the Bank of England's 2% target but not slowing as much as anticipated.

The British currency hit a three-month high against the euro in early trading but weakened later as eurozone business activity data boosted the euro by 0.2% to 85.26 pence.

As per data cited by Reuters, sterling options volatility, indicating trader demand for protection against large future price swings, rose for contracts covering the July 4 election date. Two-month sterling options volatility saw its largest one-day increase since mid-April on Wednesday, reaching 6.09%, its highest level in a week.

Choose your points of movement

Сalculate your hypothetical P/L (aggregated cost and charges) if you had opened a trade today.

Market

ETFs Search
ETFs
Crypto
Shares
Currency
Bonds
Commodity
Index

Instrument

Search
Clear input
Porsche
Procter & Gamble
Roku Inc
Deere
Quanta Services
Yandex
UniCredit
Rolls-Royce
Inditex
Deliveroo Holdings
Goldman Sachs
Coca-Cola Co (NYSE)
Infosys
Toro
ChargePoint Holdings Inc
Comcast
Chipotle
Campari
The Cheesecake Factory
Virgin Galactic
LVMH
Eni
Medtronic
ProSiebenSat.1
Qualcomm
BioNTech
SIG
Meta (Formerly Facebook)
Philip Morris
Visa
Schlumberger
SMCI
Plug Power
Nike
ADT
3D Systems
Nikola Corporation
Pinterest Inc
Bristol Myers
Jumia Technologies
Broadcom
Upstart Holdings Inc
Salesforce.com
Hanesbrands
Amazon.com
Cinemark
Moderna Inc
AMC Entertainment Holdings
Air France-KLM
Glencore plc
Starbucks
Uber
Golar LNG
Pfizer
Palantir Technologies Inc
CrowdStrike Holdings
Mastercard
Blackrock
Vir Biotechnology
Toyota
Kuaishou
MerckCo USA
Cisco Systems
Porsche AG
II-VI
Evraz
JD.com
Snap
JP Morgan
Lululemon
UPS
AIA
Deutsche Bank
Airbus Group SE
Zoom Video Communications
XPeng Inc
Trade Desk
AbbVie
Sartorius AG
Mondelez
Hammerson
CNOOC
Snowflake
Thermo Fisher
CCB (Asia)
Kraft Heinz
Unilever
China Life
eBay
Linde PLC
GameStop
Infinera
UnitedHealth
ASOS
SAP
Barclays
Christian Dior
Wish.com Inc
AstraZeneca
FirstRand
SONY
CAT
Applied Materials
BlackBerry
ALIBABA HK
British American Tobacco
AT&T
Siemens
Diageo
Palo Alto Networks
Vipshop
Amgen
Prosus N.V.
ASML
Airbnb Inc
Lithium Americas Corp
JnJ
Wal-Mart Stores
Nasdaq
Exxon Mobil
McDonald's
Shopify
Hermes
Iberdrola
Peloton Interactive Inc.
Ozon
Apple
Volkswagen
Marriott
Sea
Micron
Conoco Phillips
Morgan Stanley
Ford
Upwork Inc.
Nel ASA
Bank of America
Accenture
Santander
Abbott
Trump Media & Technology Group
Royal Bank Canada
UiPath Inc
Spotify
Fedex
LUCID
Anglo American
Allianz
Dave & Buster's
Shell plc (LSE)
Xiaomi
Adidas
Skillz Inc
HDFC Bank
Cellnex
Freeport McMoRan
Wells Fargo
PepsiCo
Berkshire Hathaway
Lockheed Martin
Coinbase Inc
HSBC
Target
Netflix
Vonovia
PayPal
DISNEY
Invesco Mortgage
Blackstone
Boeing Co
Lumentum Holdings
Canopy Growth
Beyond Meat
Block
Qorvo
Delivery Hero SE
Teladoc
Unity Software
PG&E
Microsoft
Gilead
Li Auto
Chevron
Naspers
BP
MercadoLibre.com
Alibaba
New Oriental
CarMax
Lemonade
Citigroup
Two Harbors Investment aration
Taiwan Semi
Total
Bayer
Marston's
Twilio
Home Depot
Oracle
Gen Digital Inc
Baidu
ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd
T-Mobile
Norwegian Cruise Line
ON Semiconductor
American Express
Macy's
Vodafone
L'Oreal
Tesla
Robinhood
Nio
Lloyds
Aptiv PLC
Novavax
Norwegian Air Shuttle
American Airlines
TUI
Annaly Capital
RTX Corp
NVIDIA
Adobe
General Motors
PETROCHINA
Aurora Cannabis Inc
Barrick Gold
Fuelcell
General Electric
Anheuser-Busch Inbev
Continental
Eli Lilly
F5 Networks
Etsy
Hubspot
easyJet
Telecom Italia
Ceconomy
Rio Tinto
AMD
Cameco
Arista
Tencent
British American Tobacco
DeltaAir
Verizon
Airbus
Lufthansa
Teleperformance
GSX Techedu
Rivian Automotive
SunPower
Wayfair
IBM
Bilibili Inc
HSBC HK
Occidental
Lyft
IAG
Costco
Tilray
Fresnillo
Intel
ROBLOX Corp
BASF
Workday Inc
GoPro
DoorDash
Electrolux
GoHealth
Alphabet (Google)

Account Type

Direction

Quantity

Amount must be equal or higher than

Amount should be less than

Amount should be a multiple of the minimum lots increment

USD Down
$-

Value

$-

Commission

$-

Spread

-

Leverage

-

Conversion Fee

$-

Required Margin

$-

Overnight Swaps

$-
Start Trading

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.

All positions on instruments denominated in a currency that is different from your account currency, will be subject to a conversion fee at the position exit as well.

Analysts note that UK election unlikely to impact markets

The start of election campaigns by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Labour Party leader Keir Starmer drew attention on Thursday.  

However, analysts noted that the election is unlikely to significantly impact markets. Sunak's Conservative Party currently trails Labour by approximately 20 percentage points in opinion polls.

Sunak's predecessor, Liz Truss, saw her brief premiership in 2022 derailed by a program of unfunded tax cuts that led to a sell-off in British government bonds and negatively affected pound sterling.

 

Liz Truss

ING:  Liz Truss’ “Mini-Budget” was the last time UK politics had impact on sterling

In a comment to the Reuters news agency on May 23, Francesco Pesole, an FX strategist at Dutch bank ING, wrote that sterling was unlikely to be affected by the snap election call. According to the analyst, the pound was largely trading on U.S. and UK monetary policy, with the timing of BoE rate cuts a more significant factor than the election itself:

"The last time UK politics had any material impact on the pound outside budget announcements was when there was Liz Truss — and that was related to the budget too — outside of that it was the Brexit discussions. [...]  Sterling now is trading almost entirely on the back of monetary policy in the UK and the U.S., so the question we should be asking ourselves is 'Will the election have any clear implications for Bank of England timing for rate cuts?' and we don't think so”.

Market pricing suggests that the Bank of England is most likely to begin cutting interest rates at its September meeting, though an August cut is also possible — both after the election.

Prior to the UK inflation data, it was uncertain whether the BoE would start cutting rates in June or August.

"It could have been a tricker one (for the Bank of England inflation had come in lower — the important bit was services inflation which was still too high — as the chance of a rate cut in June has declined," Pesole added.  

UK inflation slowed to 2.3% year-on-year in April, falling to its lowest since July 2021, but not as far as markets had anticipated. Markets.com Chief Market analyst Neil Wilson wrote that the reading may be a blessing in disguise for the BoE, given UK wage growth levels:

“It may be a blessing for the BoE to prevent it from potentially cutting too soon in this cycle – we have seen how persistent inflation is and with UK wage growth still running at 5-6% there is plenty of juice in that particular tank. Either way, there is another month of data still to come”.

 

GBP forecast: ING sticks to “bullish” call on EURGBP

In a more detailed take in ING’s FX daily overview, Pesole wrote that the Dutch bank had a bullish call on the EUR to GBP pair, despite its recent lean towards the 0.85 support level:

“Surely, as we enter what will be a rather short campaign, sterling can be impacted by some pre-election pledges by Labour leaders (unless the polls show a major shift in favour of the Tories). Still, that may not be more than some noise in an overall direction for the pound, which remains determined by UK data, consequent BoE policy, and Federal Reserve expectations.

The higher-than-expected services inflation in the UK was a much more important event than the election announcement from a market perspective yesterday. The Sonia curve now only prices in 12bp of easing by August from the pre-CPI 25bp, and only 37bp by year-end. These expectations look too hawkish in our view, as we still see a cut in August and 75bp of easing by year-end. Accordingly, we stick to our bullish call on EUR/GBP despite the pair now eyeing the key 0.8500 support, and do not see reasons to adjust our views based on an earlier UK election”.

As of 13:00 on May 23, the GBP to USD currency pair, widely known as “cable” in forex markets, traded at $1.2735, with sterling ticking up 0.14% against the greenback.

EUR to GBP tilted in favour of the euro, with the common currency gaining 0.15% against sterling on the back of flash Eurozone PMIs hitting a 12-month high. EURGBP last traded at 0.8524.


When considering shares, indices, forex (foreign exchange) and commodities for trading and price predictions, remember that trading CFDs involves a significant degree of risk and could result in capital loss.  

Past performance is not indicative of any future results. This information is provided for informative purposes only and should not be construed to be investment advice. 

Latest news

New Zealand dollar drops on unexpected dovish tone from RBNZ

Wednesday, 10 July 2024

Indices

Unexpected dovish tone from RBNZ drops New Zealand dollar

Sterling steady as investors take in UK, French election results

Tuesday, 9 July 2024

Indices

Sterling steady near one-month high in wake of UK election

BP shares fall on Q2 profit warning

Tuesday, 9 July 2024

Indices

BP shares drop over 4% on Q2 lower profit warning

BP shares dip ahead of Powell Congress testimony

Tuesday, 9 July 2024

Indices

BP dips, Powell Congress speech ahead, records for Tokyo, NY

Live Chat