Fundamental view:
The British pound has fallen during the course of the trading week to reach below 1.35 level. The employment figures in the United States were stronger than the anticipation which helped the US dollar. The US Central Bank had kept interest rates unchanged at 0.25% which was widely expected and announced the reduction of its asset purchases by $15 billion per month. On the other hand, the Bank of England decide to punt on tapering, thereby risking a slowdown due to inflation. “Markets must make unconditional calls in response to the conditional statements” said Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey. In an attempt to explain why markets could not put on the decision to leave interest rates unchanged. Only two out of nine members opted for fighting rising inflation with higher borrowing costs. Pound fell sharply in response.
Britain Nationwide HPI yearly report and Britain Markit/CIPS Services PMI on 3rd November favored bullish trend for the pair whereas ISM Manufacturing PMI on 1st November and BoE Interest Rate Decision on 4th November favored bearish trend for the pair.
The major economic events deciding the movement of the pair in the next week are Fed Chair Powell Speech at Nov 08, US Initial Jobless Claims, US Federal Budget Balance at Nov 10, UK Manufacturing Production monthly report, UK GDP quarterly report at Nov 11, US JOLTS Job Openings and Michigan Consumer Sentiment at Nov 12.
GBP/USD Weekly outlook: