GBP/USD: Limited Movement As US Home Sales Dive

 | Dec 22, 2014 02:38PM ET

GBP/USD is calm on Monday as the pair is trading in the low-1.56 range. The pound had a rough week, losing about 100 points to the strong US dollar. On the release front, it’s a very quiet start to the week. US Existing Home Sales was unexpectedly weak, sliding to 4.93 million in November. In the UK, the BOE released the minutes of last week’s Financial Policy Committee.

It was a disappointing start to the week for US releases, as Existing Home Sales fell to 4.93 million in November, its lowest level in six months. The markets had expected a reading of 5.21 million. The weak reading followed the October release of 5.26 million, which was its best showing in over a year. GBP/USD has shown little movement to start off the week, but this could well change on Tuesday, as the US releases GDP and Core Durable Goods Orders.

There were some strong British releases late last week. CBI Realized Sales, which surveys retailers and wholesalers, jumped spectacularly to 61 points, its strongest showing since 1988. As well, Retail Sales, the primary gauge of consumer spending, jumped 1.6%. This crushed the estimate of 0.3% and marked its best showing since February. On Wednesday, British employment data was mixed, as Claimant Count Change dropped by 26.9 thousand, easily beating the estimate of -19.8 thousand. However, the unemployment rate moved unexpectedly higher, edging up to 6.0%.

Like many of the dollar’s major rivals, the pound plunged on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve policy statement. Previous Fed policy statements have usually stated that the Fed would maintain low rates for a “considerable time”, but the December statement changed terminology, saying the Fed would be “patient” before raising rates. In a follow-press conference, Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen was less ambiguous, saying that the Fed was unlikely to raise rates for the “next couple of meetings”. The markets took this to mean that a rate hike is in the works, but not before April. The pound was down sharply on the news, as GBP/USD dropped about 200 points on Wednesday.