Chart Of The Day: UK Gilts Signaling Pound Sterling Pullback | Investing.com (2024)

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There are four methodologies that can be used for market analysis: macroeconomic, quantitative, fundamental, and technical. Each is a different approach to solving the same problem: weighing evidence in an effort to arrive at a statistical prediction for an asset's performance.

All four are valid and bring value to the market’s analytical table. Below, we'll use technical and fundamental analysis to get some perspective on what's moving the UK's pound sterling and where it's headed.

While the pound is expected to outperform the euro, because the BoE is not expected to fight rising yields on the country's government bonds—as opposed to the ECB which last week announced it was increasing emergency bond purchases “significantly” to curb rising yields—the UK currency may underperform versus the dollar, as Gilts have been sold off much more than Treasuries.

Chart Of The Day: UK Gilts Signaling Pound Sterling Pullback | Investing.com (1)

UK vs US Yield Spread Weekly

The 10-year, UK-US spread fell last week, below the uptrend line since November 2018. This week the spread has struggled in vain to climb back above it.

Note the upper shadow in this week’s candle. It penetrated the uptrend line, but the real body remains below, the picture of resistance. If UK vs US bonds were to resume their downtrend within the falling channel, we can expect the pound to follow suit verus the dollar.

As such, we find ourselves in a bind, since we have not changed our long-term, bullish view for the pound, though we only recently turned bullish on the dollar—after being bearish on the global reserve currency for many months.

Given that these are complex trades, however, with many variables that can influence each of the two currencies, we will maintain our course in a long-term uptrend for the pound, until we see any evidence that the supply-demand balance has shifted.

Chart Of The Day: UK Gilts Signaling Pound Sterling Pullback | Investing.com (2)

GBP/USD Daily

Still, we expect that the respective bonds will be a catalyst for a technical correction for the pound, a return move, after an upside breakout that completed a massive H&S, as can be seen in the link above. This will occur before the pound resumes its move higher, to both achieve the H&S implied target, as well as to complete another, even larger, double-top, which can also be seen in the chart at the top.

The GBP/USD is trading within a descending triangle, in which sellers are consistently gaining on buyers, who have been standing still. Once available supply drowns out what demand there is at the pattern bottom, sellers would be forced to continue lowering their asking price, if they wish to continue selling.

That would set in motion a chain reaction of liquidated longs and triggered shorts, taking the price back to retest the H&S (red) neckline at the 1.35 level.

The natural uptrend lines of the 50 DMA and 100 DMA point at where the breaking points for the short-term trends might be. The 50 DMA reveals the technical pressure point at the bottom of the descending channel, while the 100 DMA points to the H&S neckline as important.

Both the RSI and the MACD have provided sell signals.

Trading Strategies

Conservative traders should avoid this trade, as it goes against the main trade.

Moderate traders could short after the downward penetration would include at least one long red candle, then wait for a return move to verify the triangle’s integrity.

Aggressive traders would short at will, provided they understand the pattern is not complete before a downside breakout and that the main trend is rising. They must accept the risk, and have a coherent trade plan in place, to which they are committed.

Here’s an example:

Trade Sample 1 – Within the Triangle

  • Entry: 1.3900
  • Stop-Loss: 1.4000
  • Risk: 100 pips
  • Target: 1.3600
  • Reward: 300 pips
  • Risk:Reward Ratio: 1:3


Trade Sample 2 – Upon Breakout

  • Entry: 1.3725
  • Stop-Loss: 1.3800
  • Risk: 75 pips
  • Target: 1.3500
  • Reward: 225 pips
  • Risk:Reward Ratio: 1:3

Author's Note: This is a forecast, based on statistics, not knowledge of the future. Even if the analysis is correct, the samples provided do not guarantee positive results. Your budget, timing and temperament will impact your personal success. Therefore, it’s imperative to develop the skill of sound money management, without which the best analysis in the world won’t make you a successful trader. Until you develop that skill, take small risks, for the purpose of learning, not in order to make big money, because you will only lose.

Chart Of The Day: UK Gilts Signaling Pound Sterling Pullback | Investing.com (2024)

FAQs

What is the UK gilt prediction? ›

The United Kingdom 10 Years Government Bond Yield is expected to be 4.418% by the end of September 2024. It would mean an increase of 19.7 bp, if compared to last quotation (4.221%, last update 5 May 2024 8:23 GMT+0). Forecasts are calculated with a trend following algorithm.

Are UK gilts a good buy? ›

Gilts, due to generally being perceived as low risk, offer lower returns than other assets. You could get better performance from investing in a corporate bond or other asset although these can be higher risk.

What is the return on the UK bonds? ›

The United Kingdom 10Y Government Bond has a 4.328% yield. 10 Years vs 2 Years bond spread is -15.6 bp. Yield Curve is inverted in Long-Term vs Short-Term Maturities. Central Bank Rate is 5.25% (last modification in August 2023).

Who owns the most UK gilts? ›

As of the first quarter of 2020, Central Government liabilities held the highest amount of government securities (gilts) with over 2.15 million. Insurance Companies and Pension funds accounted for the second highest share of UK government bonds.

What is the gilt curve? ›

A set based on yields on UK government bonds (also known as gilts). This includes nominal and real yield curves and the implied inflation term structure for the UK.

How are UK bonds performing? ›

We expect UK bonds to deliver annualised2 returns of around 4.4%-5.4% over the next decade, compared with the 0.8%-1.8% 10-year annualised returns we expected at the end of 2021, before the rate-hiking cycle began.

What is the performance of the UK gilts? ›

The UK 10 Year Gilt Bond Yield is expected to trade at 4.32 percent by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. Looking forward, we estimate it to trade at 4.14 in 12 months time.

What is the yield on UK gilts for 3 months? ›

The United Kingdom 3 Months Government Bond has a 5.255% yield (last update 5 May 2024 20:23 GMT+0).

Are UK gilts declining? ›

In January, bond dealers and investors told the DMO there had been a "significant structural change" that had lowered demand for long-dated gilts, partly due to turmoil that affected pension funds during Liz Truss' short-lived premiership in 2022.

How safe are UK gilts? ›

Gilts have a very high credit rating, reflecting the fact that interest and capital repayment is guaranteed by the UK government, which has never failed to make these payments on time and in full.

What is the dirty price of gilts? ›

Dirty price

The total price payable on the purchase of a bond calculated as the clean price plus accrued interest for all gilts except index-linked gilts with a 3-month indexation lag.

Are UK gilts tax free? ›

UK gilts are exempt from Capital Gains. Interest on gilts are liable to income tax unless held in a SIPP or ISA so you would need to report the interest if not held in either of these accounts.

What is the best bond to invest in the UK? ›

UK Gilts

The UK Gilt treasury is based on the underlying bond security issued by the UK government. The government has never failed to make interest or principal payments on gilts when they are due, therefore this is one of the safest investments a trader can make.

Is it a good time to invest in gilt? ›

The RBI is expected to reduce rates by 25-50 basis points later in the year, following a global trend. This could result in capital appreciation in long-duration and gilt funds, potentially offering double-digit returns to investors.

What is UK gilt futures? ›

A Gilt Future contract (“Gilt Future”) is a deliverable derivative contract based on a basket of UK government bonds (“Gilts”).

How are UK government bonds performing? ›

When bond yields increase, their prices fall and government bonds have lost a lot of value since the start of 2022. As an example, the average total return of the IA UK Gilts sector from 31 December 2021 to 31 October 2023 has been -27.61%. We've seen rates rocket from near zero to 5%.

What is the yield on a 50 year UK gilt? ›

The United Kingdom 50 Years Government Bond has a 4.267% yield (last update 4 May 2024 8:23 GMT+0).

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