GBP/USD Price Forecast: Pound Hits 1.3283 Low as Dollar Surges to 99.35 — BOE Hike Odds Hit 70%

GBP/USD Price Forecast: Pound Hits 1.3283 Low as Dollar Surges to 99.35 — BOE Hike Odds Hit 70%

Oil at $119.50, UK gas prices doubled since the war began, and Mojtaba Khamenei's hardline appointment killed the ceasefire trade | That's TradingNEWS

TradingNEWS Archive 3/9/2026 12:21:22 PM
Forex GBP/USD GBP USD

GBP/USD at 1.3340 — The Pound Is Losing to the Dollar, but Not as Badly as Every Other Currency on the Planet, and That Distinction Matters

GBP/USD is trading at approximately 1.3340 to 1.3350 Monday, down 0.5% on the session — the weakest the pound has been against the dollar since hitting a three-month low of 1.3283 during early European trading before staging a partial recovery to 1.3409 when oil pulled back from its $119.50 overnight peak. That intraday range of 1.3283 to 1.3409 — 126 pips — tells you everything about the tension in this pair right now. The dollar is relentlessly bid on oil-driven inflation fear and geopolitical safe-haven flow. The pound is simultaneously being supported by the most aggressive hawkish repricing in UK interest rate expectations seen in years. These two forces are colliding in real time, and the result is a GBP/USD that is falling — but falling far more slowly than almost every other G10 currency facing the same dollar wrecking ball.

The DXY at 99.35 — Three-Month High, Rising Channel, and Why USD Is the Only Safe Haven That Matters Right Now

The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) hit 99.35 Monday — a three-month high — after surging 0.5% against a basket of six major currencies. The USD was strongest against the Euro, outperforming by 0.63%, with GBP lagging at -0.50%, JPY at -0.41%, AUD at -0.41%, NZD at -0.26%, CHF at -0.26%, and CAD actually up 0.19% against the dollar — the only major currency that outperformed USD Monday due to its own oil revenue exposure as a major crude exporter. The DXY is trading inside a rising channel on the 2-hour chart with the 50-EMA providing support near 98.90. The immediate resistance level is 99.68 — which aligns with the 0% Fibonacci mark and a prior swing high. That 99.68 level is the ceiling to watch. A clean break above it targets a continuation of the rising channel structure. On the downside, the 38.2% and 50% Fibonacci retracement levels at 98.87 and 98.62 respectively represent stacked support — meaning dips toward 98.90 are buy opportunities for DXY, not breakdown signals.

The fundamental driver of USD strength is not merely geopolitical fear — it is the inflation repricing that WTI at $96 to $119 and Brent at $98 to $119.50 forces into U.S. rate expectations. Oil at $100-plus means February CPI — releasing Wednesday — is already stale before the ink dries. The real inflation number the market is trying to price is March and April CPI, which will fully capture gasoline's 50-cent-per-gallon weekly surge to $3.48. A Fed that was already on hold at 3.5% to 3.75% now faces an inflation trajectory that makes rate cuts essentially impossible to discuss in the near term. Every basis point that gets stripped out of Fed easing expectations in 2026 is a basis point of additional USD strength. That is the mechanical engine behind DXY's move from approximately 96 to 97 pre-war to 99.35 today.

GBP/USD at 1.3340 — Why the Pound Is the Strongest Loser in a Sea of Dollar Victims

The most analytically important fact about GBP/USD's Monday performance is not that it fell 0.5% — it is that EUR/USD fell 0.76% on the same day, and EUR/USD lost 1.70% last week versus GBP/USD's loss of only 0.57% over the same weekly period. Sterling is dramatically outperforming the Euro against the dollar, and the reason is specific, quantifiable, and directly tied to the Bank of England interest rate repricing. Two weeks ago, swaps markets were pricing approximately three BOE rate cuts for 2026. As of Monday, those three cuts have been entirely eliminated and replaced with a roughly 70% probability of a rate hike by year-end. The UK interest rate currently sits at 3.75%. A market that was pricing a path toward 3.00% or below is now pricing a path toward 4.00% or above — a swing of 100 basis points in expected BOE policy direction within two weeks.

UK two-year gilt yields surged 30 basis points in a single session — the biggest single-day move in UK short-dated bonds since October 2022, the Liz Truss mini-budget crisis. Ten-year gilt yields rose to 4.73% from approximately 4.30% before the conflict started. That 43-basis-point move in UK 10-year yields over the course of the war reflects a fundamental shift in how the bond market is thinking about UK inflation, UK rate policy, and UK sovereign risk simultaneously. Higher yields are attracting capital into sterling-denominated assets, providing a structural bid under GBP that partially offsets the dollar's safe-haven dominance. This dynamic is unique to the UK among G10 currencies and explains why GBP/USD is at 1.3340 rather than 1.3100.

Saxo Bank analyst Neil Wilson put the repricing in stark numerical terms: markets have moved from pricing near three BOE cuts to pricing a 70% probability of a hike — a complete directional reversal. UniCredit's Edoardo Campanella noted that the appointment of Mojtaba Khamenei as Iran's new hardline supreme leader significantly complicates the conflict's strategic outlook, increasing the probability of a more prolonged war — which is the exact scenario that keeps UK inflation elevated and BOE hiking odds elevated with it.

GBP/USD Technical Structure — 1.3283 Low, 1.3254 Key Support, 1.3190 the Danger Zone

GBP/USD's technical setup is bearish but with meaningful structural support that makes aggressive shorting at current levels dangerous without clear momentum confirmation. The pair is trading below its 20-day EMA, which sits at approximately 1.3466 and is now serving as resistance rather than support — a classic bearish flip. The 14-day RSI has slid to approximately 35, which is below the 50 midline and confirms downside momentum, but is not yet in oversold territory that would signal exhaustion of the selling pressure.

The 2-hour chart shows GBP/USD locked inside a descending bearish channel. The pair bounced from the $1.3280 to $1.3300 support zone multiple times but cannot sustain any move above the channel resistance and the 50-EMA, both sitting near $1.3370 to $1.3400. That zone — 1.3370 to 1.3400 — is the critical short-entry level. Resistance above that runs to the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement at 1.3539, which aligns with the 20-day EMA and represents the level a genuine reversal would need to clear.

On the downside, the March 3 low at 1.3254 is the immediate critical support level. A daily close below 1.3254 opens the path to 1.3190 — the 78.6% Fibonacci retracement of the broader corrective phase — and then to the channel base near 1.3250 and below. Technicians using the daily chart see 1.3356 as a significant support zone, noting that GBP/USD failed to close below this level on a daily basis throughout last week despite multiple intraday breaches. Monday's price action is again testing below this threshold intraday. Whether it holds on a daily close is the single most important technical question for the week ahead in this pair.

UK GDP and Factory Data Friday — The Catalyst That Could Break Sterling's Relative Strength

GBP/USD's current resilience rests almost entirely on the BOE hawkish repricing. That repricing is justified by oil-driven inflation expectations, but it has a structural vulnerability: if UK economic data confirms that the oil shock is generating demand destruction and growth contraction rather than merely inflation, the BOE hawkish premium begins to evaporate. A central bank that faces stagflation — rising inflation and falling growth simultaneously — cannot simply hike rates without risking a recession. That is the ECB's exact dilemma, which is why EUR/USD has underperformed GBP/USD so severely. The question is whether the BOE faces the same constraint.

January UK GDP data releases Friday. Monthly factory output data for January is scheduled alongside it. These January readings predate the war's February 27 start date — meaning they will not capture any war-related damage to the UK economy. The market's response will therefore be driven more by the trajectory they reveal than by any direct conflict impact. A GDP miss or weak factory data would raise concerns that the UK economy was already softening before the oil shock and is therefore more vulnerable to stagflation dynamics than current BOE rate pricing implies. That scenario would compress the sterling rate premium and send GBP/USD back toward 1.3190 faster than the current bearish channel structure would otherwise suggest.

 

Wednesday's U.S. CPI — The Dollar's Next Catalyst and GBP/USD's Next Directional Trigger

U.S. CPI for February releases Wednesday and is the single most important scheduled event for GBP/USD this week. The February reading will not capture the oil shock's full impact — WTI was trading near $60 to $65 for most of February before the war began on February 27. The market knows this. What Wednesday's CPI number does is establish the pre-war inflation baseline from which the March and April prints will diverge dramatically. If February CPI comes in hot — above the prior month's reading — it adds a second layer of Fed hawkishness on top of the oil-shock inflation forward expectations already being priced. That double-hawkish signal would push DXY above 99.68 and drive GBP/USD through 1.3254 toward 1.3190 in accelerated fashion. If February CPI comes in soft — below consensus — it creates a temporary relief trade where GBP/USD could bounce toward 1.3409 to 1.3430 before the broader bearish trend reasserts itself.

The sequencing matters: CPI Wednesday, UK GDP Friday, then the following week's PCE data. Each release tightens or loosens the inflation narrative. The direction of that narrative determines whether the DXY stays above 99 or pulls back toward 98.50, and whether GBP/USD defends 1.3250 or surrenders toward 1.3100.

European Energy Prices and the UK's Specific Vulnerability — Gas Up 25% Monday, Doubled Since War Began

UK gas prices for month-ahead delivery surged nearly 25% Monday morning to 171p per therm when trading opened before slipping back to approximately 149p per therm. Gas prices have now roughly doubled from pre-war levels, though they remain below the 640p per therm extreme reached in 2022 during the Russia-Ukraine energy shock. For the UK — which is more exposed to European natural gas pricing than the United States given its geographic proximity and pipeline infrastructure — the gas price surge carries direct household and industrial inflation consequences that are more immediate than the gasoline pump price dynamics driving U.S. CPI concerns.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has warned of the conflict's impact on the UK economy, reportedly considering energy support measures that some commentators are describing as echoing the emergency energy schemes deployed during the Truss administration in 2022. The comparison to the Truss-era energy crisis is not flattering for sterling — the 2022 Truss mini-budget triggered a GBP/USD collapse to near parity at 1.0350, though that was driven by fiscal mismanagement rather than the energy shock itself. The current situation is fundamentally different in that the BOE is hawkishly repricing rather than being caught in a credibility crisis. But the market reference point exists and creates a psychological ceiling on GBP/USD recovery potential as long as UK energy prices remain elevated.

European gas prices broadly gained as much as 30% Monday to reach €69.50 per megawatt hour at session open. Susannah Streeter, Chief Investment Strategist at Wealth Club, described it as the biggest energy price jump since the pandemic outbreak, framing the current situation as an emerging inflation crisis rather than a temporary supply disruption. That framing — inflation crisis — is exactly what the BOE rate repricing reflects and exactly what continues to provide the structural support under sterling that is preventing GBP/USD from following EUR/USD's sharper downward trajectory.

The Mojtaba Khamenei Factor — Hardline Supreme Leader Appointment Eliminates Near-Term De-escalation Scenario

The appointment of Mojtaba Khamenei — son of the slain supreme leader Ali Khamenei — as Iran's new supreme leader following his father's death in the conflict is one of the most important geopolitical developments for GBP/USD's medium-term direction. Mojtaba Khamenei is regarded as a hardliner with no track record of pragmatic negotiation with Western powers. Trump explicitly stated last week that Iran's choice of a new supreme leader would be "unacceptable" and indicated his intent to be involved in who replaces the former leader — a statement that itself signals the diplomatic channels between Washington and Tehran are essentially nonexistent.

UniCredit's Campanella described the appointment as significantly complicating the strategic outlook and increasing the probability of both a more intense and a more prolonged conflict. A prolonged conflict means sustained oil above $100, sustained DXY pressure above 99, sustained UK BOE hawkish repricing, and sustained GBP/USD in the 1.32 to 1.34 range rather than recovering toward the 1.36 to 1.38 levels seen before the war began. The appointment removes what was the single most plausible near-term positive scenario for GBP/USD — a diplomatic off-ramp leading to Strait of Hormuz reopening, oil pullback, DXY retreat, and cable recovery. That path is now materially narrower.

GBP/USD vs. GBP/CAD and GBP/AUD — The Pound's Cross-Rate Vulnerabilities

While GBP/USD's relative resilience against the dollar is real and quantifiable, sterling faces more significant downside risk against commodity-linked currencies where the energy shock creates the opposite dynamic. GBP/CAD is at risk of reaching 1.80 in the coming days, according to current technical analysis — a significant move that reflects the Canadian dollar's benefit from $100-plus oil as a major crude producer. The AUD similarly has commodity-linked support. GBP/NZD is positioned for a bearish week. These cross-rate dynamics matter for understanding where sterling's genuine weakness lies — it is not primarily against the USD given the BOE repricing buffer, but against currencies that benefit from the commodity complex surge that is simultaneously crushing UK's terms of trade as an energy importer.

Verdict on GBP/USD — Sell Resistance at 1.3390, Target 1.3254 and then 1.3190, No Long Until 1.3190 Holds or Ceasefire Signals Emerge

GBP/USD is a sell on rallies toward 1.3390 to 1.3409, with the initial target at the March 3 low of 1.3254 and the secondary target at 1.3190 — the 78.6% Fibonacci retracement. Stop above 1.3430 — a break above that level would signal that the channel resistance has been violated and the short thesis needs reassessment. The BOE hawkish repricing and sterling's structural rate advantage prevent a collapse toward 1.30 in the current environment, but they are not sufficient to generate a sustained recovery with DXY at 99.35 and oil above $95. The pair is in a defined bearish channel on the 2-hour timeframe with sellers reliably defending every rally toward 1.3370 to 1.3400. That pattern holds until Wednesday's CPI or Friday's UK GDP produces a data surprise significant enough to break it. Hot U.S. CPI accelerates the path to 1.3190. Soft U.S. CPI gives GBP/USD a bounce toward 1.3430 that is itself a sell. The only genuine reversal catalyst for GBP/USD is a credible ceasefire framework that sends oil back below $80 — at which point the BOE hawkish repricing partially unwinds, the DXY retreats from 99, and cable reclaims 1.36 toward 1.38. Until that catalyst emerges, the direction in GBP/USD is lower, just slower than almost every other dollar pair on the board.

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