On Friday, the US dollar declined against the British pound, the quotes rose to the price value of 1.3880.
The pair returned to the middle of the range, where it has been since mid-February. Rising US unemployment and strong UK data kept the pound from falling further. The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Thomas Barkin, said that the US economy will return to pre-crisis levels by the end of the year. Inflation will also rise significantly, but businesses are not changing their medium-term pricing plans. The Fed expects inflationary pressures to ease in the second half of the year and has no plans to change its monetary policy.
A similar situation has developed in the UK. Consumer price growth is growing, but it does not reflect a real recovery in inflation. The Bank of England is slowing its bond purchases to 3.4 billion pounds a week between May and August in response to strengthening economic indicators. The regulator also raised its GDP forecasts for 2021 and lowered them for 2022. At the same time, even the previous February estimate of the Bank of England was at the upper end of the agreed range, and the latest change now risks seeming overly aggressive and may require an early increase in the interest rate. Analysts at Barclays noted that the Bank of England was already one of the most optimistic regulators even before it raised its economic outlook.
Signals for trading GBP/USD currency pair
The forecast assumes a corrective decline in Pound/Dollar to the supports of 1.3860, 1.3830 and 1.3800.