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The Shadow of Stagflation in the UK Economy: Why Is the Pound Struggling to Maintain Its Current Resilience?
Driven more by geopolitical concerns than domestic factors, the pound experienced another week of decline, leading to a second consecutive week of fall against the US dollar. Meanwhile, market participants currently expect the Bank of England not to resume rate cuts this year. Instead, the market has priced in approximately 50 basis points of rate hikes by the end of the year.
Although the pound has performed relatively well recently, underlying vulnerabilities are beginning to emerge. On the surface, this trend makes sense. The market has significantly revised its expectations for the Bank of England, shifting from anticipating rate cuts to considering the possibility of further hikes. This shift has supported the pound, allowing it to outperform most Group of Ten currencies except the US dollar and commodity currencies. However, this support has almost been fully priced in.
The pound’s resilience is primarily based on interest rate expectations. The front end of the UK yield curve has experienced sharp fluctuations, with the market quickly abandoning expectations of easing monetary policy and leaning toward further rate hikes. Inflation risks, especially pressures from high energy prices, have become the market’s main focus. This re-pricing helps stabilize the pound, even though the overall macroeconomic environment lacks sufficient fundamental support. That is the key issue: current interest rate support is largely reflected in the prices.
Looking further, the UK economy still appears fragile. Before recent geopolitical shocks, economic growth was already subdued, and the current growth pattern is clearly shifting toward stagflation: inflation pressures are rising again, while economic activity cools and the labor market gradually loosens.
At the same time, familiar structural concerns re-emerge. The UK’s current account deficit and its sensitivity to high financing costs have once again become topics of market discussion. In this context, the situation becomes more complex. Short-term interest rate increases typically support the domestic currency, but rising long-term government bond yields suggest a very different narrative. The recent rise in UK bond yields reflects market concerns about fiscal sustainability and financing costs. Historically, this is not a favorable environment for the pound.
(The above content is from Pablo Piovano’s perspective on April 3rd, for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice.)#Gate广场四月发帖挑战