This range of forecasts comes together at the tail end of a year where the Pound has traded within a 12 cent range against the common currency, reaching as high as 1.2030 in April before plumbing lows beneath the 1.0800 threshold in August.
Sterling moves toward the final session of the year trading at 1.1266 against the Euro and carrying a -3.98% loss for 2017 overall.
Key to the frenetic performance has been the ebb and flow of rumours, hopes and fears over the single market, customs union and what Brexit should really mean. The first interest rate hike in a decade was also an important factor in pulling Sterling back from its August precipice.
Those same questions will haunt the currency again during the twelve months to December 2018, but the performance of the UK economy and question of whether the Bank of England will attempt to raise rates again will also be key.
Added to this, whether or not the European Central Bank follows up the October 2017 curtailment of quantitative easing with a full exit from its crisis era stimulus program will have just as much an influence actions and exits quantitative.
Analysts give their views on the likely culmination of all these factors below.
“When volatility breaks higher, currencies with foreign funding needs (either because of external liabilities or because of a current account deficit) will suffer most. GBP and CAD have the widest current account deficits within the G10, while AUD and NZD run high external liability positions.”
“We would suggest that being long (buying) EUR and JPY against AUD, NZD, GBP ,and CAD should do well into 2018.”
The Morgan Stanley team are betting the Pound will fall against the Euro and Japanese Yen in the year ahead.
They forecast that the Euro-to-Pound rate will rise to 0.9400 by the end of the year, which puts the Pound-to-Euro rate down at 1.0638.
“Against the euro, a stabilisation around the EUR/GBP 0.86-0.88 range should prevail, rather than a strengthening, due to the simultaneous appreciation of the EUR/USD.”
EUR/GBP of 0.8790 puts the Pound-to-Euro rate at 1.1415.
EUR/GBP 0.9200: GBP/EUR 1.0869
“Depending on how the negotiation process evolves, GBP/USD risk scenarios range from 1.26 to 1.47, and rather than a directional conviction in spot, our favored GBP trade is to be long EUR/GBP volatility.”
“Unsurprisingly, this is evident in market sentiment – analysts’ forecasts for GBP/EUR range from 1.04 to 1.25, a range of just over 20%.”
“With this in mind, we expect the BoE to tighten by more than investors are anticipating in 2018, but agree with them that the ECB won’t raise rates until 2019. This feeds into our forecast that euro/sterling will rebound to €1.18/£ next year.”
“This was a far bigger drop than the one implied by the shift in relative interest rate expectations, reflecting the additional hope of more unconventional easing from the BoE.”
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