GBP/USD: Pound Loses Ground After Fed Minutes Release

 | Aug 22, 2013 06:45AM ET

The US dollar has reversed direction and is posting gains against the British pound. In Thursday’s North American session, the pound finds itself just below the 1.56 level. The dollar is broadly stronger following the release of the FOMC minutes, which indicated that the Fed plans to taper QE, but didn’t provide any specifics. In economic releases, Thursday’s highlight was US Unemployment Claims. The key indicator was a disappointment, coming in above the forecast, but the pound was unable to take advantage. There are no British releases on Thursday.

There has been a lot of speculation about when the Federal Reserve will taper its QE program, and the markets were hopeful that the release on Wednesday of the FOMC minutes of its most recent policy meeting would shed some light on the Fed’s plans. The minutes didn’t contain any dramatic news, but the US dollar was broadly stronger after their release. Fed officials were described as “broadly comfortable” with plans to taper QE, but remain split on the timing of such a move. The policymakers noted that recent US economic data was “mixed” and all members agreed that it was still too early to scale back the current QE program, under which the Fed purchases $85 billion in assets each month. The markets are anticipating that the Fed will make a move in the near future, and traders should be prepared for a scaling back of QE as early as September.

UK releases have been showing some improvement, and there was more good news on Wednesday. Public Sector Net Borrowing improved sharply, posting its first surplus since February, with a reading of -1.6 billion pounds. However, this fell short of the market estimate of -3.7 billion. Meanwhile, CBI Industrial Order Expectations, which has been mired in deep negative territory, climbed to the zero level. This easily beat the estimate of -8 points. The improving releases out of the UK have helped the pound post a strong rally against the dollar over the past two weeks.