GBP/USD Sterling Trapped Below 1.33 as BoE Rate Dilemma Deepens on Oil Shock

The pound (GBPUSD) hovered near 1.3205 in early London trade on Friday, stuck below the 1.33 handle as the Bank of England faces a sharpening policy dilemma between sticky inflation and growth risks from the Middle East oil crisis. Sterling has shed more than 650 pips from January’s peak near 1.3870, with Thursday’s 0.65% drop extending losses into a fourth straight session.

GBPUSD 1 Day Chart

GBP/USD 1 Day Chart

Market Snapshot

GBP/USD (GBPUSD) traded at 1.3205 as of 10:00 a.m. London, down 0.12% on the day after testing 1.3180 support overnight. The pair faces immediate resistance at 1.3380-1.3399, with a break above needed to halt the downward momentum toward 1.3000. Against the euro, sterling slipped 0.40% to 85.59 pence (EURGBP 0.8559), while GBP/JPY fell 0.31% to 209.98 as risk-off flows favored the yen.

UK gilt yields retreated from recent highs but posted their sharpest monthly climb in over a year, with the 10-year (GB10YT=RR) up 6 bps on the day at 4.87% as investors priced in prolonged policy uncertainty.

Policy Conundrum

The BoE’s March 19 decision to hold rates at 3.75% left markets split on the next move, with money markets now pricing a 50% chance of a hike by April 30 rather than the cut previously expected. Inflation held steady at 3.0% year-on-year in February, double the central bank’s 2% target, while services inflation remains elevated at 5.2%.

“Markets have completely repriced from two cuts to two hikes in 2026, but the BoE has set a very high bar for moving rates higher,” said a London-based FX strategist at a major bank, speaking on condition of anonymity. “Until we see clear evidence that oil-driven inflation is feeding into wages, the committee will likely pause.”

BoE policymaker Alan Taylor struck a cautious tone last week, emphasizing that borrowing costs should remain steady until the economic impact of the Iran conflict becomes clearer. The central bank faces a stagflationary trap: Brent crude (LCOc1) surged above $107 a barrel on Friday, up 1.5% on the day, threatening to push UK inflation toward 4% in coming months while dampening growth.

Macro Implications

The oil shock has forced a stark reversal in BoE expectations. Traders had priced in two 25-basis-point cuts for 2026 as recently as early March. Now, at least two hikes are anticipated, with a third possible if Brent sustains above $105. This divergence with the Federal Reserve, which held rates at 3.75% in March but signaled a slower pace of disinflation, has widened the policy gap supporting the dollar.

“The stagflationary mix is toxic for sterling,” said a rates trader at a European bank. “The BoE can’t cut with inflation at 3% and oil at $107, but hiking into a growth slowdown risks a deeper downturn.”

About the author

 

Martin Lam is ATFX Chief Analyst for Asia Pacific, with over 20 years of experience in global forex and investment markets. He holds a degree in Finance and Economics from Deakin University and has held senior roles at leading FX brokerage firms.

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