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GBP/USD upthrust spurred by UK’s wage growth, despite US retail sales surge

  • UK wages excluding bonuses soar to the highest growth rate since 2001, pushing unemployment to 4.2%.
  • US Retail Sales outperform expectations, prompting Goldman Sachs to uplift Q3 GDP projections.
  • BoE’s potential rate hike in focus as traders anticipate Wednesday’s inflation report; GBP/USD eyes 1.2800 resistance.

GBP/USD rises following Monday’s session, which portrayed a ‘hammer’ formation, suggesting that further upside is expected. Jobs data in the UK overshadowed upbeat economic data from the United States (US), as wages grew above estimates, adding to the Bank of England’s (BoE) inflation pressures. Hence, the GBP/USD trades at 1.2705, above its opening price by 0.21%.

UK’s robust wage data adds to BoE’s inflation concerns, while US economic indicators paint a mixed picture

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) revealed that wages excluding bonuses rose 7.8% YoY in the three months to June, which according to Reuters, represents “the highest annual growth rate since comparable records began in 2001.” The same report highlighted the Unemployment Rate climbed to 4.2% from 4%.

In the meantime, traders brace for Wednesday’s inflation report. Any upside surprise could increase BoE’s chances of raising rates. Money market traders are fully pricing in a 25 basis point hike at its September meeting, with around a 12% chance they lift rates by a larger size of 50 basis points.

On the US front, US Retail Sales in the US exceeded estimates of 0.4% MoM, with July sales growing by 0.7%, while excluding Autos, also called core retail sales, jumped  1%, smashing forecasts of 0.4%. Core Retail Sales correspond most closely with the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) consumer spending component.

The report triggered a revision of US growth prospects, with Goldman Sachs raising Q3’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to a 2.2% annualized rate. Today’s data was computed by Atlanta’s Fed GDPNow model, which forecasts GDP expectations, jumping to 5% from 4.1% foreseen on August 8.

Meanwhile, bets for a pause on hikes by the Federal Reserve (Fed) in September remain intact at 89% after the data, while for November, it stood above 30% chance.

Other data from the US Department of Labor showed that Import and Export Prices rose above estimates. At the same time, the New York Federal Reserve revealed its Manufacturing Index plunged to -19, exceeding projections of -1, after business conditions improved in July.

Minnesota’s Fed President Neil Kashkari crossed the wires, expressing that inflation is still too high, even though he feels good about its progress while noting uncertainty about whether the Fed has done enough or needs to do more. He added US central bank officials are surprised by the economy’s resilience.

Given the backdrop, the GBP/USD could test the 1.2800 figure if UK’s inflation becomes higher than estimated. On the other hand, expect GBP/USD weakness if prices continue to cool down, as expected.

GBP/USD Price Analysis: Tech ical outlook

Although the GBP/USD remains in consolidation, it acquired a slight bullish bias, but its advancement is being capped by the 50 and 20-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA), each at 1.2734 and 1.2756, respectively. A daily close above those levels could impulse the GBP/USD exchange rate toward the 1.2800 figure, followed by 1.2900 and the July 27 pivot high at 1.2995. Conversely, if GBP/USD fails to print a daily close above 1.2700, expect the pair to dive towards the current week’s low of 1.2616 before challenging 1.2600.

 

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