Trading Insight Ahead Of The BoE Meeting Next Week

 | Oct 20, 2022 04:55PM ET

After much anticipation, Liz Truss leaves Downing Street after 44 days on the job, and the process of finding a new PM kicks in – 100 Tory MP nominations are needed (out of a possible 357) , and that means we should see 2 or 3 candidate in the running early next week – Rishi Sunak is the clear front-runner but Boris Johnson is making a play and the flow of betting capital follows Boris.

We should learn more of the riders by early next week, for the announcement to be made on Friday – GBP/USD has had somewhat of a whippy ride, with buyers into 1.1336 before US Treasuries started finding sellers and yields marched higher, resulting in the USD reversing hard.

GBP volatility should be contained given the budget is still to be released on Oct. 31. That said, the counterargument to that is we see volatility arise from the uncertainty stemming from the BoE meeting on Nov 3 – 91bp of hikes are priced in by the market, and while the consensus has been for a 100bp hike, there is a growing belief that it could be 75bp – one to consider next week.

EUR/GBP is good to put on the radar as a cleaner expression of the GBP (it removes USD risk) and a tactical view of next week’s ECB meeting – the set-up needs work with two clear days of indecision in the price action– as a momentum trade the daily needs a push through 0.8733 and we could be looking at 0.8900 - traders tend to shy away from this cross as price action is more of a grind than the big intraday ranges you get in the USD pairs.

It is the US bond show that drives broad markets, and while liquidity is an issue, talk is there are just no buyers – We also see ‘terminal’ rate pricing for the fed funds rate is now above 5%, and United States 5-Yearr Treasuries (now 4.45%) are eyeing a move into 4.5%.

US real rates creep higher, which is worryingly for risk, and we see 5yr real rates at 1.91% and the top of the range of 2%. As mentioned before, terminal fed funds pricing and US real rates are where the USD is most focused and if that moves higher, then so does the buck, and that weighs on risky assets like equity.