GBP/USD Edges Higher as GDP Outperforms

 | Jan 13, 2023 04:33AM ET

The British pound is slightly higher on Friday. GBP/USD is trading at 1.2234, up 0.24%. The pound has enjoyed a solid week, with gains of 1.2%.h2 US inflation drops again/h2

US inflation continues to decline and slowed for a sixth straight month in December. Headline CPI fell to 6.5%, down from 7.1% and matching the estimate. The drop was driven by lower gasoline prices and new and used vehicles. Core CPI showed a similar trend, dropping from 6.0% to 5.7%, which matched the forecast. Inflation is coming down slowly and remains much higher than the Fed’s 2% target, as any Fed member will quickly point out. Still, inflation is on the right path as the impact of the Fed’s aggressive tightening cycle is being felt in the economy.

The inflation data came in as expected, but the markets were nonetheless delighted, and the US dollar sustained losses across the board on Thursday. The Fed was also pleased that inflation continues to downtrend. After the inflation release, Fed member Harkins said he supports a 25-basis point hike at the February meeting and expects rates to rise “a few more times this year,” with a 25-bp pace being appropriate.

This sounds like an acknowledgment that inflation has peaked. However, we won’t be hearing the “P” word from any Fed official for fear of the markets going overboard and loosening conditions, which would complicate the fight against inflation. Other Fed members have come out in support of a 25-bp hike in February, and the CME’s FedWatch has pegged the odds of a 25-bp increase at 93%. Barring some unforeseen event, a 25-bp hike looks like a done deal.

In the UK, GDP for November outperformed, with a 0.1% gain, above the forecast of -0.2% but weaker than the October read of 0.5%. The broader picture is not pretty, with GDP falling by -0.3% in the three months to November. The UK economy is sputtering, and the Bank of England has its work cut out as it must continue raising rates, despite the weak economy, to curb high inflation. The BoE meets next on Feb. 2.