On Thursday, May 8, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank will each announce their monetary policy decisions. Expectations are for both banks to leave rates steady, but there is some speculation that one may actually enact a rate cut, which may create interesting opportunities when trading the Euro and British Pound this week.
Discuss the Euro and British Pound with our DailyFX Analysts on our EUR/USD and GBP/USD Forum Threads.
Bank of
Rate Announcement: May 8, 2008 at 11:00 GMT
Bias: No Change
The Bank of England is expected to leave rates steady on Thursday at 5.00 percent – the lowest since December 2006 – after cutting by 25bps during their last meeting. The rate decision will come at 7:00 EDT but since the Monetary Policy Committee is anticipated to leave rates unchanged, they are unlikely to issue a monetary policy statement which should leave the market’s reaction to the news somewhat muted. Nevertheless, given the fact that the vote for the April rate cut included six in favor of the 25bp reduction, two votes for no change, and one vote for a 50bp cut, it’s clear that there is major disagreement amongst the Committee on what their next move should be.
What are the fundamental factors that the MPC will be taking into account? Inflation pressures in the
These expectations that inflation pressures will ease in coming months is only part of the reason why dovish MPC members like David Blanchflower continue to vote for aggressive rate cuts. Furthermore, the economy is gradually deteriorating, and conditions are likely to get worse. According to data released over the past week, the services sector is slowing rapidly as PMI fell to a multi-year low of 50.4; just barely managing to hold above the 50 level to signal expansion, whereas a drop below 50 would indicate contraction in the sector. Meanwhile, PMI manufacturing dipped down to a reading of 51.0 from 51.3, but given the unexpected 0.5 percent drop in industrial production, it is clear that both demand for and output of UK-made goods are waning. However, the most vulnerable point of the
Given these significant downside risks for the
European Central Bank – Still Hawkish, But No Hike.
Rate Announcement: May 8, 2008 at 11:45 GMT
Bias: No Change
The European Central Bank is expected to leave rates unchanged at 4.00 percent, but traders will be far more interested in the tone of ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet’s remarks, rather than the highly anticipated policy statement. Throughout the first quarter of 2008, Mr. Trichet has been unrepentantly hawkish, stressing the need to control prices first and foremost. Upside prices pressures persists to be the main area of concern for the ECB President Trichet, and while we saw estimates for Euro-zone CPI in April plunge to 3.3 percent from 3.6 percent, this is still well above the ECB’s 2 percent target as energy and food costs remain high. Indeed, Trichet’s emphasis on inflation rather than growth stems from the ECB’s mandate, which in contrast to the Federal Reserve, commands the Bank to maintain price stability rather than stimulate growth. However, the other reason for Mr. Trichet’s steadfast commitment to a restrictive monetary policy is due to the fact that for most of the first quarter, the Euro-zone has been largely insulated from the negative impact of the credit crunch that afflicted the
Indeed, while the
In short, the global slowdown in growth is beginning to spillover into Euro-zone economy and the currency market will be watching carefully to see if Mr. Trichet acknowledges that fact. The ECB does not like to surprise the markets, preferring instead to improve its transparency by preparing investors for any policy changes well in advance. Therefore, if Mr. Trichet chooses to de-emphasize price pressures and instead focuses on the possible downside growth risks to the Euro-zone economy, traders will interpret his words as a sign that the ECB’s monetary policy bias has turned from restrictive to neutral. In that case, with no future prospect of any additional rate hikes in the Euro-zone, traders are likely to sell the euro across the majors on a wave of profit taking. On the other hand, if the ECB remains stalwart in their focus on inflation, the currency could continue to be bid on the same de-coupling theme that initially pushed the unit to record highs against the dollar.
Will The Rate Decisions Help Derail The EURGBP Rally?
Technically, the massive rally we’ve seen in EURGBP may have hit an intermediate top. According to Technical Strategist Jamie Saettele, the drop from .8097 is probably a larger 4th wave. 4th waves tend to be complex in their structure, which makes trading them difficult. However, as long as the series of lower highs is intact since .8097, a bearish bias is warranted against .7947 (most recent ‘swing high’). The initial bearish objective is not until former resistance (which will probably act as support going forward) at .7612). Adding the fundamental environment to the mix, the simple combination of no change in rates by the Bank of England at 7:00 EDT followed by noticeably less-hawkish commentary by European Central Bank President Trichet at 8:30 EDT could be enough to weigh EUR/GBP down toward noted support at 0.7612.

Written Terri Belkas, Currency Analyst and Jamie Saettele, Technical Strategist for DailyFX.com

