
Two central banks, two fiscal trajectories, one cross rate stuck in a 40-pip range. The boredom is the signal.
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Begin where the wires will not: EUR/GBP at 0.8625, up four-hundredths of a percent overnight, sitting inside a range it has refused to leave since the spring. EUR/USD at 1.1635 and cable at 1.3489 are doing the heavy lifting in the dollar story; the cross between the two European currencies is the quiet print that matters, and quiet is itself a position.
I was, in March, of the view that this cross would have broken 0.87 by now on the assumption of a faster Bank of England cutting path than the ECB's. That call has aged poorly. The market priced what I priced, then unpriced it, and the curve I was reading turned out to be reading me. Worth saying before continuing.
What the flatness tells you: rate differentials between Bund and Gilt at the front end have compressed, but the term premium on Gilts beyond the ten-year is doing the work that the policy rate is not. Translation — sterling is being held up by the supply story, not the carry story. Buyers of duration are demanding compensation for a fiscal path that the autumn statement did little to clarify, and that compensation arrives as yield, which arrives as currency support. It is an ugly form of strength.
The ECB side is the mirror image. The committee is not monolithic; the most recent meeting carried internal dissent on the pace of balance-sheet runoff, and the minutes — when they arrive — will matter more than the rate decision itself did. A faction wants to slow QT to defend periphery spreads; another wants to press on. The euro is trading as if the slower faction wins. I am not yet convinced.
Equities are doing their own thing and should be read separately. DAX up 0.83% to 25,389.10 yesterday, FTSE 100 up 0.95% at the Friday close to 23,167.47 — both reflecting the same global risk bid rather than anything specifically European. Do not confuse correlation with conviction.
The view, with the confidence frame attached: EUR/GBP grinds toward 0.8550 over the coming weeks if the next UK CPI print surprises to the downside and the Gilt curve bull-flattens. It grinds the other way, toward 0.8700, if the ECB minutes confirm the slow-QT faction has the chair's ear. Below 0.8580 or above 0.8680, I am wrong about the range, and the breakout is the trade.
Geopolitical risk — the reported US strikes in southern Iran — belongs in the oil column, not this one, until it shows up in the Bund curve. So far, it has not. Markets are sometimes wiser than the headlines that surround them, and sometimes merely slower. We will know which by Friday.