GBP/USD remains steady near 1.3450 as traders exercise caution ahead of the UK labour market data. The pair trades around 1.3430 during Asian hours after modest gains in the previous session.
The ILO Unemployment Rate is projected to ease to 5% from 5.1%, while Average Earnings Including Bonuses are expected to decelerate to 4.6%. Traders also look ahead to the UK Consumer Price Index and Retail Sales figures for December.
US Tariff Tension
The US Dollar faces uncertainty due to tension over US tariffs imposed on eight European countries, planned from February 1. In response, European Union ambassadors are preparing retaliatory measures.
US labour market data have prolonged expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts until June. Morgan Stanley analysts now foresee rate cuts in June and September, delaying their previous timeline.
The Pound Sterling, the world’s oldest currency, is the UK’s official unit, widely traded in the foreign exchange market, with GBP/USD accounting for 11% of FX transactions. The Bank of England’s monetary policy, set to maintain a 2% inflation rate, significantly impacts the currency’s value.
Economic data such as GDP, PMIs, and employment can influence the Pound’s direction, as can the Trade Balance, by affecting demand and investment levels.
Market Strategy Focus
As of January 20, 2026, GBP/USD is trading cautiously around 1.2750 while we await key UK inflation and labor data. This is a familiar situation to what we saw in January 2025, when the pair was also in a holding pattern ahead of data releases, though at a much higher level near 1.3450. The primary focus for derivative traders should be on the potential divergence in policy between the Bank of England and the US Federal Reserve.
Looking back to early 2025, we were anticipating the UK unemployment rate to ease to 5%; however, the most recent data shows it holding firmer at 4.2%. The key challenge now is not just employment but stubbornly high UK services inflation, which the latest figures from late 2025 pegged at 4.5%, complicating the Bank of England’s path forward. Options traders might consider straddles or strangles to play potential volatility around the upcoming UK CPI release, as a surprise figure could force the market to reprice interest rate expectations sharply.
On the other side of the pair, the US dollar is facing pressure as the market is now pricing in a 60% probability of a Federal Reserve rate cut by June 2026. This contrasts with early 2025, when strong labor data consistently pushed back rate cut expectations. With the latest US Non-Farm Payroll report showing a modest gain of 175,000 jobs, there is growing evidence that the US economy is cooling, which could weigh on the dollar in the coming weeks.
We should also recall the market noise from January 2025 surrounding the proposed US tariffs on European goods over the Greenland issue. That event caused a temporary spike in volatility but had no lasting impact, serving as a valuable lesson. It suggests that while we must be aware of geopolitical headlines, our core strategy should be built around economic fundamentals and central bank policy, which remain the ultimate drivers of currency valuation.