GBP Took Another Leg Higher Against JPY

 | Sep 18, 2017 02:19AM ET

Developed market (DM) central banks dominate the financial markets thought process and the debate last week centred on whether markets have been far too pessimistic on future rate hikes. The strong re-pricing that was seen last week confirms that was clearly the case and it promises to be an interesting couple of months with the market eyeing important announcements of monetary policy normalisation in this Thursdays FOMC meeting, but also the 26 October ECB and the 2 November BoE meeting.

Arguably the most aggressive market moves have been seen front and centre in UK assets, with the UK 10-Year gilt pushing up a further seven basis points (bp) on Friday to 1.30%, taking the increase on the week to a huge 31bp. The hawkish Bank of England statement was given a second wind on Friday when BoE member Gertjan Vlieghe, widely considered the most dovish member of the central bank, detailed that “the evolution of the data is increasingly suggesting that we are approaching the moment when bank rate may need to rise”.

GBP took another leg higher, notably against the JPY (GBP/JPY rallied 2% on the day), while GBP/USD has now reclaimed well over 50% of its Brexit losses and is eyeing a move into $1.3804 - the 61.8% retracement of the Brexit sell-off.

The BoE have a delicate balancing act here, between guiding the market to a rate hike this year, while at the same having to deal with what has been a strong tightening of financial conditions and if they get this wrong it could be a large miscalculation.

The implied probability of a November hike from the BoE now sits at 64% and I suspect given the recent commentary that this pricing will gravitate towards 75% to 80% in the coming weeks, but it’s interesting to see how this is now firmly weighing on the FTSE 100 here. Take a look at the daily chart of the FTSE 100, with price breaking below the 7600 to 7300 trading it’s been moving in since May. Unless GBP finds some decent profit taking the FTSE will be sold into rallies.