The Pound Sterling showed a recovery against the US Dollar, as the GBP/USD achieved new monthly peaks above 1.3250.
This stabilisation is attributed to the UK’s Autumn Budget and potential interest rate cuts by the Bank of England, alongside anticipated rate reductions by the US Federal Reserve in December.
Autumn Budget and Interest Rates
Currently, GBP/USD remains steady near 1.3245, with expectations of limited downside due to possible December Federal Reserve rate cuts. UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves outlined the Autumn Budget, presenting tax hikes and modifications to business rates, benefits, and pensions.
The Office for Budget Responsibility adjusted its 2025 UK growth forecast upwards from 1.0% to 1.5% post-budget, though 2026 estimates lowered to 1.4% and 1.5% for subsequent years. This scenario might provide a minor relief rally for the Pound against the Dollar in the short term.
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The Pound is holding firm against the Dollar near 1.3250, but we see this as a fragile balance. The market is betting heavily on the US Federal Reserve cutting interest rates this month, which is lifting the pair. However, the possibility of the Bank of England also considering cuts puts a cap on any major rally.
Inflation and Trading Strategies
We believe the market’s focus on a Fed cut is supported by recent data showing US inflation cooling to 3.1% in November 2025, even as the jobs report remained solid with 199,000 new jobs. Traders are now pricing in around an 85% probability of a rate reduction at the Fed’s December meeting. Today’s US ISM Manufacturing report will be the next major test of this view.
In the UK, inflation has also cooled to 3.9%, which gives the Bank of England room to consider its own rate cuts in early 2026. While the Autumn Budget gave the Pound a short-term lift, we are cautious about the OBR’s weaker growth forecasts for 2026 and beyond. This long-term outlook could start to weigh on the currency soon.
For the coming weeks, we see value in buying GBP/USD put options with a January 2026 expiry. This strategy allows for profiting from a potential downturn if US economic data comes in stronger than expected or if the Fed sounds less eager to cut rates. A strike price around 1.3150 would offer a good balance of risk and reward.
Alternatively, with both the Fed and Bank of England policy paths uncertain, we expect a spike in volatility. Traders could consider option straddles, buying both a call and a put, to profit from a large price swing in either direction around the mid-December central bank meetings. This is a pure play on movement, not direction.