Wednesday 6 November 2013

UK Services PMI delivers the goods but for how long?


Over the past last few sessions, sterling has been struggling to maintain gains against the euro. Positive economic figures from the UK have done little to push the GBPEUR rate significantly higher, and even a solid construction PMI figure couldn’t do enough to force GBPEUR beyond recent levels. Yesterday the service PMI reading increased to 62.5 and showed the service sector grew at the fastest pace in 16 years, while new orders was at its strongest level since records began. This allowed sterling to finally return to the driving seat, with the GBPEUR rate shooting through 1.19.

In order to see more substantial moves, and to ensure sterling holds up against the euro, UK data needs to provide stellar results. With the picture brightening over the past few months, evidence suggesting the recovery is building momentum has grown and optimism about the UK outlook has increased. Today we have seen solid numbers from UK manufacturing and industrial production, and mixed results from the eurozone such as falling retail sales, and rising German factory orders. Initially the GBPEUR rate rose after the release of UK data, however German factory orders were enough to erase sterling gains and send the rate below 1.19 again. This shows that UK releases that are in line, or marginally above expectations are unlikely to produce enough momentum to keep sterling competitive against the euro.

While the pressure on the euro is helping sterling to direct GBPEUR higher, a more hawkish shift from the central bank will do more to ensure an upward trend in GBPEUR. The market is already predicting the central bank may raise rates earlier than outlined in forward guidance, but for now an increase in the BoE’s economic projections released next week should be welcomed by the market. This may provide GBPEUR with more sustainable support, helping to drive the rate higher in the near term.

Sasha Nugent
Currency Analyst