- In the European foreign exchange market, the British pound against the US dollar and the euro remains in a narrow fluctuation range, mainly directly constrained by the geopolitical stalemate in the Middle East and the spillover effects of energy price volatility.
- The Iranian-related negotiation process is stalled, and local conflicts are escalating. The main contract of Brent crude oil futures, driven by supply-side concerns, has reached a high point in over a week.
- Market participants have significantly adjusted their expectations for the Bank of England's interest rate hikes, with the pricing of the first 25 basis point rate hike in the interest rate swap market now pushed back to September.
Evolution of Geopolitical Situation and Energy Price Transmission
The persistence of geopolitical conflicts in the Middle East is profoundly affecting the pricing logic of the global energy market. The latest developments show no substantial breakthrough in US-Iran negotiations, and local military frictions have affected Kuwait Airport and shipping routes around the Strait of Hormuz. Driven by this geopolitical risk premium, Brent crude oil futures (BRN1!) rose by 2.08% in a single day, reaching the upper edge of the recent fluctuation range. Given the high dependence of the UK's macroeconomic structure on imported energy, the rise in global fuel costs will directly transmit to UK domestic inflation data, thereby exerting an unignorable input pressure on macroeconomic growth expectations.
Reassessment of the Bank of England's Interest Rate Path
Against the backdrop of increasing external inflation variables, the market has repriced the Bank of England's (BOE) monetary policy tightening cycle. Compared to the hawkish expectations at the onset of the Middle East conflict, institutional investors now tend to believe that the Monetary Policy Committee will adopt a more cautious wait-and-see strategy. According to the latest pricing model of the short-term sterling overnight index swap (OIS) market, traders expect a 25 basis point rate hike to be implemented no earlier than the September monetary policy meeting. For the overall policy path in the second half of the year, the market estimates that the cumulative number of rate hikes within the year will be less than two, reflecting a prudent consideration of the balance between downside risks to economic growth and inflation stickiness.
Pound Exchange Rate Fluctuation Range and Interest Rate Differential Considerations
The foreign exchange market's response to the aforementioned macro variables is relatively muted. The pound against the US dollar (GBP/USD) slightly fell by 0.08%, with the latest quote hovering around 1.3447, at the core position of the recent technical fluctuation range. The pound against the euro (EUR/GBP) slightly declined by 0.01%, remaining basically flat at 0.8634. The macro strategy team at SEB points out that if shipping through the Strait of Hormuz can return to normal in the short term, the Bank of England will have a more ample policy evaluation window. If core inflation, excluding energy prices, does not rebound unexpectedly, a wait-and-see policy stance may put pressure on the pound in terms of interest rate differentials. However, if the conflict shows signs of easing, the subsidy pressure on UK public finances will be significantly reduced, which may constitute a potential support factor for the pound's medium to long-term trend.
Transatlantic Monetary Policy Divergence Expectations
The differing policy steps of major global central banks are reshaping capital flows in the foreign exchange market. In contrast to the Bank of England's tendency towards moderate rate hike expectations, the European Central Bank (ECB) is widely priced by the market to continue its tightening cycle at next week's monetary policy meeting. Meanwhile, recent macroeconomic indicators released by the US show strong economic resilience, coupled with potential upward pressure on the inflation center, prompting investors to bring forward the potential rate hike timetable of the Federal Reserve (Fed). This transatlantic monetary policy cycle misalignment, combined with the volatility of risk aversion sentiment brought about by geopolitical risks, is expected to continue to dominate the pricing center of the pound against major non-US currency cross rates in the coming weeks.




