The Pound Sterling (GBP) is forecasted to consolidate within the 1.3455 to 1.3525 range. In the longer term, it’s anticipated to fluctuate between 1.3360 and 1.3525, according to UOB Group’s FX analysts Quek Ser Leang and Peter Chia.
Yesterday, the expectation was for GBP to trade between 1.3415 and 1.3470. Contrary to predictions, it rose to a high of 1.3527 before retreating to close at 1.3477, marking a 0.21% increase. No substantial rise in upward momentum was observed, suggesting limited further increase today with a likelihood of consolidation within 1.3455 and 1.3525.
Anticipated Trading Range
For the upcoming weeks, GBP’s recent stabilisation has been noted, leading to the anticipation of trading between 1.3360 and 1.3525. Despite a brief rise above 1.3525, upward momentum remains unclear, continuing the expectation of GBP trading within the projected range.
The recent spike in the Pound to 1.3527 failed to hold, signaling a lack of strong upward momentum. We expect the currency to consolidate, likely trading within a range of 1.3455 to 1.3525 in the coming days. This suggests that betting on a significant breakout in either direction is a risky play right now.
This stability comes as the Bank of England remains in a holding pattern, with the latest CPI data from late September 2025 showing inflation has settled near its 2% target. Similarly, steady but moderate US jobs data gives the Federal Reserve little reason to alter its own policy. Without a strong push from either central bank, the currency pair is likely to remain contained.
Trading Strategies and Options
For the next few weeks, traders should consider strategies that profit from this expected low volatility and range-bound movement. An iron condor, for example, could be structured by selling a call spread above the 1.3525 resistance level and a put spread below the 1.3360 support. The goal is to collect the premium as long as the Pound stays within this broader channel.
Implied volatility for GBP/USD options has been trending lower, which supports this view of consolidation. We’ve seen a significant drop from the highs experienced back in 2023 when central banks were aggressively hiking rates. This current environment rewards strategies that benefit from time decay rather than large directional moves.