Sterling Cracks 1.3415 at the 200-DMA Wall as the Burnham Succession and BoE Hike Bets Fuel the Rebound
BP/USD pushed above 1.3400 as UK political risk faded ahead of July 9 leadership nominations and markets fully priced a BoE hike by year-end on the oil-driven inflation scare | That's TradingNEWS
Key Points
- GBP/USD held above 1.3400 near 1.3415 as Labour leadership nominations opened July 9 with Andy Burnham the uncontested frontrunner for PM by July 20.
- BoE hike bets hit fully priced for a 25bp year-end hike on the oil shock, but the hawkish Fed (dot plot to 3.8%) and level 3.75% rates cap the upside.
- Key levels: the 200-DMA at 1.3400 and the 1.3451 SMA cluster are the wall; support sits at 1.3300 then the 1.3165 June low.
GBP/USD is trading above 1.3400 on Thursday, changing hands near 1.3415 in early European hours and holding a constructive tone as it builds on Wednesday's gains. That level matters more than any other on the chart: 1.3400 is where the 200-day moving average sits, the exact ceiling that has capped every sterling rally in 2026, and cable is pressing against it now on the back of a genuine two-week recovery off its June low of 1.3165. The pound has climbed roughly 1.7% off that bottom and hit a fresh one-year high against the euro, but against the dollar it faces the wall that decides whether this is a real trend change or just another corrective bounce within a broader downtrend.
The recovery is being powered by two tailwinds turning at once, and both crested this week. UK political risk is deflating fast as Andy Burnham's clean succession approaches, with Labour leadership nominations opening July 9 and the frontrunner widely expected to become prime minister by around July 20, uncontested and pledged to stick to the government's fiscal rules. At the same time, Bank of England rate-hike bets have surged, with markets now fully pricing a 25-basis-point hike by year-end, up from 75% before the latest Iran escalation, as the oil shock revives UK inflation fears. Layered on broad dollar softness, with the dollar index easing toward 101, those forces have lifted cable to the top of its range.
That sets up the thesis: GBP/USD has staged a genuine rebound, but it has arrived at the 200-day moving average at 1.3400, and whether it breaks that wall decides everything. The pound's tailwinds are real, the fading political premium and rising BoE hike bets, but the ceiling is structural, anchored by a hawkish Warsh Fed that keeps the dollar bid and by UK and US rates sitting almost level at 3.75% with no yield gap to pull cable higher. The bracket is clear: 1.3400 and the 1.3451 moving-average cluster above, the 1.3165 June low below. The July 9 nominations and the late-July central-bank double-header of the Fed on July 28-29 and the BoE on July 30 are the catalysts that break the tie. This is a near-term-bullish, broader-bearish pair stalled at the decisive level.
Break the 200-DMA or Fall Back: The Whole Question
The entire GBP/USD forecast reduces to one binary: can cable break and hold above its 200-day moving average at roughly 1.3400, or does it fail there again as it has all year? That single level is the referee between the bull and bear cases, and the pair sitting right on it means the market is at a genuine inflection point rather than trending. Above 1.3400 and holding, the medium-term downtrend that dominated 2026 is broken and sterling's recovery becomes a real trend change. Rejected at 1.3400, and the bounce off 1.3165 is confirmed as corrective, with the pair likely to drift back toward the lower half of its range.
The chart captures the pound's predicament precisely: near-term bullish, broader bearish, and stalled at the decisive level. Cable trades above its 8-day, 21-day, 50-day, and 100-day moving averages, a short-term bullish alignment that reflects the recovery off the June low and confirms the bounce has momentum. But it sits at or just below the 200-day simple moving average around 1.3400, and that is the level keeping the broader structure bearish. The split between the short-term and long-term signals is the whole story: the pound has rallied enough to reclaim its short-term averages, but it has not yet reclaimed the 200-day, which means the downtrend is still technically intact.
For the forecast, this framing matters because it defines what a trader actually needs to watch. A sustained daily close above 1.3400, and ideally above the 1.3451 cluster where the 50-, 100-, and 200-day averages converge, would confirm the trend change and open the path toward the mid-1.30s and eventually the January high near 1.3817. A rejection at 1.3400 followed by a slide back below the short-term averages would confirm the bounce has run its course and point back toward 1.3300, 1.3165, and potentially lower. The pair has spent 2026 trading between roughly 1.3165 and 1.3817, and at 1.3415 it sits in the middle-to-upper portion of that range, testing the ceiling. The break-or-fail decision at the 200-DMA is not a side detail; it is the trade. Everything else in the forecast feeds into whether cable has the fundamental fuel to clear that wall.
The Political Risk Premium Is Deflating Fast
The tailwind that has done the most to lift sterling off its lows is the unwinding of the UK political risk premium, and it is a genuine improvement. Prime Minister Keir Starmer resigned in late June after a by-election defeat, triggering a leadership vacuum at exactly the moment UK fiscal credibility was under scrutiny, and gilts and sterling both weakened initially on fears of instability. But the succession has turned out cleaner than feared. Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor who returned to Westminster, emerged as the frontrunner and sole declared candidate, and his pledge to stick to the government's existing fiscal rules reassured markets that a change at the top would not mean a spending blowout or a gilt-market crisis.
That reassurance is precisely what let the pound shed its risk premium. The market's biggest fear with a UK leadership change is fiscal irresponsibility, the ghost of Liz Truss's 2022 mini-budget still haunting sterling, and Burnham's commitment to the fiscal rules removed that tail risk. His well-received first major policy speech, combined with the broad support other contenders threw behind him, convinced investors that the UK would avoid a lengthy, disruptive leadership contest. The result was a steady sterling recovery as the political uncertainty that had weighed on the pound receded.
The July 9 nominations are the immediate catalyst, and they are why today matters for cable. Labour leadership nominations open July 9, and if no one comes forward to challenge Burnham, it confirms an uncontested path to Downing Street, which would firm sterling further by removing the last shred of succession uncertainty. Burnham is expected to be in place as prime minister by around July 20, before Parliament returns in September. For the forecast, the political unwind is a real pound-positive that has fueled the recovery, but it has limits. Burnham becoming the seventh prime minister in ten years adds to the broader Westminster instability narrative, and his past arguments for moving beyond orthodox deficit-focused policy keep some fiscal-credibility risk alive, which is why markets want continued reassurance. The political premium deflating is a genuine tailwind that helped cable reach 1.3400, but it is largely priced now, and a new PM is unlikely to spark a sustained upward trend on its own. The politics got sterling to the wall. Clearing the wall needs more.
BoE Hike Bets Have Surged on the Oil Shock
The second tailwind lifting sterling is a sharp repricing of Bank of England rate-hike expectations, and it flipped this week. Markets now fully price in a 25-basis-point BoE rate hike by year-end, up from a 75% probability before the latest Iran escalation, a jump driven by the oil surge reviving UK inflation fears. When Brent climbed toward $80 on the renewed US-Iran strikes, traders concluded the energy shock would keep UK inflation elevated and force the BoE to stay hawkish, which lifted the rate-hike bets that support the pound through the yield channel.
The BoE's own stance reinforces the hawkish tilt. The Monetary Policy Committee held Bank Rate at 3.75% in a 7-2 vote on June 18, with two members wanting to hike immediately, and Governor Andrew Bailey has ruled out imminent rate cuts, saying cuts are off the table at the moment even as falling energy prices had eased some inflation pressure. Bailey confirmed inflation remains on track to hit the 2% target, though later than previously forecast, and warned that energy-price changes take time to feed through, potentially pushing UK inflation above 3.25% in the fourth quarter, which would keep rates high into the winter. That guidance, no cuts and a live hike risk, is a structural support for sterling.
The catch is that the hike bets have swung with the oil price, making them volatile. Before the latest escalation, when oil had fallen below $73 and the ceasefire looked to be holding, markets had scaled back to pricing just one hike this year, down from two expected earlier, and the BoE hike odds had softened. The renewed conflict pushed them back up to fully priced. For the forecast, the BoE hike bets are a genuine pound tailwind, but they are hostage to the oil price and the Iran conflict, which means they could reverse as fast as they rose if crude rolls back over. The rate story provides sterling a floor, Bailey's no-cuts stance and the live hike risk keep the pound supported, but it is not a durable, standalone catalyst because it depends on an oil shock that the market keeps expecting to fade. The BoE hike bets helped push cable to 1.3400. Whether they hold depends on whether the war premium in oil holds, which the crude tape suggests is fragile.
The Hawkish Fed Is the Ceiling Overhead
The force capping sterling is the same one capping every dollar pair: the Federal Reserve under Chair Kevin Warsh has turned decisively hawkish, and that keeps the dollar bid and pins cable below 1.3400. At Warsh's June meeting, the Fed held its target range at 3.50% to 3.75% but removed its easing bias and published a dot plot pointing to a year-end rate near 3.8%, implying a possible hike rather than the cuts the market had once expected. The June minutes, released Wednesday, showed 9 of 19 policymakers favoring a rate hike by year-end and flagged inflation as the dominant risk, and Warsh has repeatedly called inflation too high while citing sticky core price pressures.
That hawkish shift is the structural bid under the dollar. Removing the easing bias and signaling a possible hike gives the greenback support that has kept it resilient even when soft US data knocks it back, and it is why the dollar index has held near 101 rather than collapsing. For cable, the hawkish Fed is the direct counterweight to sterling's tailwinds: every time the pound tries to break the 200-DMA on the political unwind or the BoE hike bets, the firm dollar pushes back, keeping the pair capped. The Fed dot plot pointing to 3.8% by year-end tells the market the Fed is more likely to hike than cut, and that supports the dollar even against a pound with its own hawkish story.
The near-term Fed catalysts reinforce the ceiling. Thursday's US jobless claims came in at 215,000, below the 218,000 expected, confirming labor-market resilience that supports the hawkish hold, and Fed speakers Williams and Logan are due to comment on the oil-driven inflation risk. Any hawkish emphasis firms the dollar and pressures cable back below 1.3400. For the forecast, the hawkish Fed is the reason the pound cannot easily break its ceiling. Sterling's domestic story has genuinely improved, but the dollar side of the pair is firm, and a currency pair is a relative trade. The Fed's hawkishness has to soften, or the pound's tailwinds have to overwhelm it, for cable to clear 1.3400 durably. With the Fed signaling a possible hike and the oil shock validating its inflation worry, the ceiling is well-defended. The late-July Fed meeting on July 28-29 is the terminal event that either reinforces or relieves that ceiling.
The Rate Differential Offers No Pull Either Way
The mechanical driver that normally sets a currency pair's direction, the interest-rate differential, offers almost no signal for GBP/USD right now because UK and US rates sit nearly level. The Bank of England's Bank Rate is 3.75% and the Federal Reserve's target range is 3.50% to 3.75%, so there is no meaningful yield gap pulling the pair one way or the other. That absence of a rate differential is unusual and important: it means cable is driven less by the classic carry trade and more by the second-order factors of dollar sentiment, UK politics, and the marginal shifts in each central bank's hike odds.
This near-parity in rates is why the pair has been so range-bound and so sensitive to non-rate catalysts. When the yield gap is wide, it dominates and the pair trends toward the higher-yielding currency. When rates are level, as they are now, the pair oscillates on relative shifts in the economic and political narrative, which is exactly the choppy, headline-driven behavior cable has shown all year. Both central banks are hawkish, both are holding near 3.75%, and neither is providing the directional yield signal that would push the pair decisively.
The differential could shift if either central bank moves first. If the BoE hikes to 4% while the Fed holds, the gap opens in sterling's favor and cable could break higher. If the Fed hikes while the BoE holds, the gap opens against sterling and cable falls. Both meetings cluster in late July, the Fed on July 28-29 and the BoE on July 30, which makes that window the moment the rate differential could finally provide a directional catalyst. For the forecast, the level rate differential means GBP/USD is a relative-narrative trade rather than a carry trade, and its direction depends on which central bank's hawkishness proves more durable and on the dollar's broader path. The pound's tailwinds and the dollar's firmness are fighting to a near-draw precisely because the rates are level. The late-July double-header is where one side could finally break the symmetry, and until then, cable stays pinned near its 200-DMA, driven by politics and sentiment rather than yield.
The Dollar Side Is Softening but Not Breaking
Because GBP/USD is heavily a dollar story, the greenback's path is the dominant swing factor, and the dollar has been softening without breaking. The dollar index has eased toward 101, down from the yearly high near 101.34 it hit in late June, as a soft US jobs report and the partial pricing-in of the Fed's hawkishness took some steam out of the rally. That dollar softness is a key reason cable was able to reach 1.3400, since a weaker dollar mechanically lifts every dollar pair including sterling. On Thursday the dollar struggled to find fresh demand despite the Iran risk-off backdrop, allowing the pound to hold its gains above the wall.
But the dollar's softness has clear limits, anchored by the hawkish Fed. The dollar index steadied near 101 rather than collapsing on the soft payroll print precisely because Warsh's removal of the easing bias and the dot plot pointing to 3.8% give the greenback a structural bid. US inflation was revised up to around 3.6% for 2026 on the energy shock, and that hawkish combination is what keeps the dollar resilient even when individual data points disappoint. The greenback is not in a downtrend, it is consolidating near its highs with occasional pullbacks, which is why cable's rallies keep stalling at the 200-DMA rather than breaking through.
The Iran conflict adds a haven dimension that complicates the read. The dollar picks up safe-haven demand during risk-off episodes, which supports it against the pound when tensions escalate, but the July 9 tape showed the haven bid was muted, with the dollar softening even as the US bombed Iran. That muted haven demand is part of why sterling held above 1.3400. For the forecast, the dollar side is the pivot: a dollar index that keeps softening toward 100 and below would let cable break the 200-DMA and confirm a trend change, while a dollar that firms back toward 101.34 on hawkish Fed signals or a haven bid would push cable back below 1.3400. The dollar is soft enough to let the pound test the wall but firm enough to defend it, which is the standoff keeping cable pinned. Watch the dollar index 101 level as the mirror of the cable 1.3400 level: they are the same battle from opposite sides.
Today's Catalysts Can Break the Standoff
Thursday's calendar carries the catalysts that could push cable out of its holding pattern, and the most sterling-specific one is domestic. Labour leadership nominations open July 9, and the outcome shapes the pound's political-premium unwind: an uncontested path for Burnham, with no challenger emerging, would remove the last succession uncertainty and firm sterling further, potentially giving cable the push it needs to clear 1.3400. A surprise challenge, by contrast, would revive the instability narrative and pressure the pound. The nominations are the reason today is a live session for GBP even before the US data.
On the dollar side, the US slate reinforces or relieves the ceiling. Weekly jobless claims printed 215,000, below the 218,000 expected, supporting the Fed's hawkish hold and, at the margin, the dollar. Fed speakers Williams and Logan are due to comment on the economy and the oil-driven inflation risk, and any hawkish emphasis would firm the dollar and cap cable, while a dovish tilt would let the pound extend. US existing home sales round out the US data as a secondary read. The June FOMC minutes released Wednesday, showing 9 of 19 favoring a year-end hike, still color the dollar's tone.
The overarching catalyst remains the Iran conflict through its effect on oil and BoE hike bets. If the war keeps crude elevated, UK inflation fears stay alive and the BoE hike bets that support sterling hold, but if oil rolls over on de-escalation, those bets fade and remove a pound tailwind. For the forecast, the July 9 catalysts skew the risk toward sterling if the nominations confirm an uncontested Burnham path and the dollar stays soft, which could give cable the break above 1.3400 it has been unable to achieve. But the bigger events loom later in the month: the Fed on July 28-29, the BoE on July 30, and Burnham's move to Downing Street around July 20. Today's catalysts can nudge cable through the wall or reject it, but the durable directional resolution waits for the late-July double-header. The nominations are the near-term swing; the central-bank meetings are the decider.
The Technical Map Is All About 1.3400
The chart centers entirely on the 1.3400 to 1.3451 zone, and the technical structure captures the near-term-bullish, broader-bearish split. Cable trades above its 8-day and 21-day exponential moving averages and near its 50-day and 100-day, a short-term bullish alignment reflecting the recovery off the 1.3165 June low. The Relative Strength Index around 57 suggests constructive but not overextended upside momentum, and the pair is pressing the upper half of its recent range with the Bollinger Bands widening modestly. Those are the fingerprints of a genuine bounce with room to run in the near term.
The resistance stack is where the battle happens. The 200-day simple moving average sits around 1.3400, the single most important level, with a dense cluster of the 50-, 100-, and 200-day averages converging near 1.3451 that acts as a cap on rebounds. Above that, the Bollinger upper band near 1.3470 is where buyers could hesitate, and the broader descending trendline from the 1.3817 to 1.3869 January high area is the ceiling that defines the 2026 downtrend. On the downside, immediate support is the Bollinger middle band near 1.3300, then the rising structural trendline around 1.3159 to 1.3165 where previous pullbacks found demand, with the Bollinger lower band near 1.3130 beneath that.
The technical verdict hinges on the 200-DMA. Reclaiming and holding above 1.3400, then clearing the 1.3451 cluster, would confirm the medium-term downtrend is broken and open the path toward 1.3470, the mid-1.30s, and eventually a challenge of the 1.3817 January high. Failing at 1.3400 and slipping back below the short-term averages would confirm the bounce is corrective and point toward 1.3300, then 1.3165. For the forecast, the technical map is unambiguous about what matters: 1.3400 is the referendum, with the 1.3451 cluster the confirmation level above and 1.3165 the June low below. The short-term momentum is bullish and the pair is testing the wall, but the wall has held all year, and only a decisive break changes the broader structure. Cable is coiled at its most important level, and the technicals say the next sustained move out of the 1.3300 to 1.3451 zone sets the trend for the rest of the quarter.
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The Short-Term and Long-Term Signals Are at War
The defining technical feature of cable right now is the conflict between its short-term and long-term signals, and that war is the whole story of the pound's predicament. On the short-term timeframes, everything is bullish: the pair sits above its 8-, 21-, 50-, and 100-day moving averages, the RSI is constructive, and the recovery off 1.3165 has clear momentum. On the long-term timeframe, the picture stays bearish: the pair remains below the 200-day moving average around 1.3400, and it sits beneath the descending trendline from the 1.3869 area that has defined the 2026 downtrend. The bounce has reclaimed the short-term averages but not the long-term one.
This split is exactly why the 1.3400 break is so consequential. The short-term bullish signals say the recovery has legs; the long-term bearish signals say the recovery is corrective until proven otherwise. The resolution comes from which timeframe the next catalyst validates. If the nominations confirm Burnham, the dollar softens, and the BoE hike bets hold, the short-term bulls win, cable clears 1.3400, and the long-term downtrend finally breaks. If the Fed reasserts its hawkishness, the dollar firms, and oil rolls over, the long-term bears win, cable fails at 1.3400, and the downtrend reasserts.
The historical context favors caution. GBP/USD has trended weaker against the dollar for decades, roughly halving since the early 1970s, so the low 1.30s are historically normal territory rather than a depressed level begging for a rebound. That long-term structural weakness is the backdrop the bulls are fighting, and it is why analysts describe the recovery as needing confirmation rather than assuming it. For the forecast, the short-term-versus-long-term war is the technical embodiment of the fundamental standoff: sterling's improving domestic story drives the short-term bullish signals, while the hawkish Fed and the structural downtrend anchor the long-term bearish ones. The pair sits exactly at the level where the two collide, the 200-DMA at 1.3400, and the break-or-fail decision there resolves the war. Until it breaks, the honest read is a corrective bounce inside a broader downtrend, which is why the bulls need the 1.3400 close to change the story.
The Oil Paradox Cuts Differently for Sterling
The Iran oil shock affects the pound in a way that is genuinely two-sided, and understanding the paradox is key to the forecast. On one hand, the UK is an energy-import-dependent economy, so an oil spike toward $80 Brent raises import costs, squeezes household purchasing power, and threatens the growth-sensitive pound, the same channel that pressures the euro. Higher energy prices are a headwind for UK growth, and a growth-sensitive currency like sterling should suffer when the oil shock hits. That is the bearish read of the oil spike for the pound.
On the other hand, and this is where sterling diverges, the oil shock has lifted BoE rate-hike bets to fully priced for a 25-basis-point hike by year-end, and those hike bets support the pound through the yield channel. The market's logic is that persistent oil-driven inflation forces the BoE to stay hawkish, and a more hawkish BoE means higher UK rates, which attracts capital and firms sterling. So the same oil spike that threatens UK growth also raises the rate support for the pound, and in the current tape, the rate-support channel has been winning, with cable rising as BoE hike bets surged.
The resolution of the paradox depends on which channel dominates and for how long. In the near term, the rate-hike-bet channel has been the stronger force, lifting sterling as the oil shock revived inflation fears and pushed the BoE hike bets to fully priced. But the growth channel is the longer-term risk: if elevated oil prices persist and the UK economy weakens, the BoE may be unable to hike into a slowing economy, and the growth drag would eventually weigh on the pound. For the forecast, the oil paradox means sterling's reaction to the Iran conflict is more favorable than the euro's, because the UK rate story provides a hawkish offset that the eurozone's cooling inflation does not. That relative advantage is part of why the pound has outperformed the euro to a one-year high. But it is contingent on the oil shock lasting long enough to keep the hike bets alive without doing enough growth damage to force the BoE dovish, a narrow window. If oil rolls over, the hike bets fade and the pound loses a tailwind; if oil spikes hard enough to break UK growth, the pound loses on the growth channel. The paradox favors sterling for now, but it is a delicate balance.
The Analysts Split From 1.28 to 1.47
The forecast community is divided on cable, and the spread of targets captures the two-sided risk. On the bearish end, JPMorgan is the most cautious, seeing GBP/USD toward 1.31 by September and 1.28 by December on a hawkish Fed and a firm dollar, with cable hovering between 1.31 and 1.34 in the near term. That bear case sits closest to current conditions, betting the dollar's firmness and UK political and fiscal risks keep the pound capped in the lower part of its range. It is the forecast that assumes the 200-DMA wall holds and the downtrend reasserts.
On the constructive end, Goldman Sachs targets 1.36 by year-end and Scotiabank 1.37, both assuming the dollar weakens as the Fed eventually normalizes, lifting the pair back toward the mid-1.30s. The most bullish call, Morgan Stanley's 1.47, depends on Fed cuts materializing, a scenario that has been pushed back by the hawkish June pivot and now looks unlikely in the near term. The mid-range consensus clusters around a 1.30 to 1.40 range for the rest of 2026, with quarterly forecasts pointing to roughly 1.33 in September, 1.34 in December, and 1.35 by early 2027, a modest upward drift rather than a decisive move.
The reconciliation across the 1.28-to-1.47 span is that cable's direction depends mostly on the dollar. The bear case requires the Fed to stay hawkish and the dollar firm, capping the pound near 1.30. The bull case requires the Fed to soften and the dollar to weaken, lifting the pound toward the mid-1.30s and beyond. The UK-specific factors, the Burnham succession and the BoE hike bets, are supporting characters that can push cable to the 200-DMA but not through it without dollar cooperation. For the forecast, the analyst spread frames cable honestly as a range-bound, two-sided pair whose direction hinges on the dollar and the late-July central-bank meetings. The wide target range, from JPMorgan's 1.28 to Morgan Stanley's 1.47, is the market pricing genuine uncertainty about whether the Fed hikes or eventually cuts. At 1.3415, cable sits between the bearish and bullish scenarios, testing the wall that separates them, with the balance of near-term catalysts, the nominations and the soft dollar, tilting slightly toward the bulls but the structural Fed hawkishness capping the upside.
The Verdict: Near-Term Bullish, Broader Bearish, Stalled at the Wall
GBP/USD at 1.3415 is a near-term-bullish, broader-bearish pair stalled at the wall, and the July 9 test of the 200-day moving average at 1.3400 is the referendum that decides trend versus bounce. The pound's recovery off its 1.3165 June low is genuine, powered by the deflating political risk premium as Burnham's clean succession approaches with nominations opening today, by BoE hike bets surging to fully priced on the oil shock, and by a softening dollar. But it has arrived at the exact ceiling that has capped every 2026 rally, and clearing it requires the dollar to cooperate. The bracket is clear: 1.3400 and the 1.3451 cluster above, 1.3165 below.
The bull case has momentum and the domestic story. The political unwind is real, the BoE's no-cuts stance and live hike risk provide a floor, the oil-driven hike bets give sterling a hawkish edge the euro lacks, and cable has reclaimed all its short-term moving averages with a constructive RSI. An uncontested Burnham path confirmed today and a dollar that keeps softening toward 100 would give cable the break above 1.3400 that flips the trend, opening the mid-1.30s and eventually the 1.3817 January high, in line with Goldman's 1.36 and Scotiabank's 1.37.
The bear case has the Fed and the structural downtrend. The hawkish Warsh Fed with its dot plot to 3.8% keeps the dollar bid, UK and US rates sit level at 3.75% with no yield pull, the 200-DMA has held all year, and the pound has trended structurally weaker for decades. JPMorgan's 1.28 target assumes exactly this. The verdict: cable is a coiled range trade stalled at its most important level, and the trade hinges on 1.3400. Break and hold above it, confirmed by an uncontested Burnham succession and a soft dollar, and the recovery becomes a trend change toward the mid-1.30s. Fail at 1.3400, reinforced by a hawkish Fed and an oil rollover that kills the BoE hike bets, and the bounce is corrective, pointing back toward 1.3300 and 1.3165. The near-term momentum leans bullish, the broader structure leans bearish, and the late-July double-header of the Fed on July 28-29 and the BoE on July 30, alongside Burnham's move to Downing Street, breaks the tie. Sterling is at the wall. Whether it climbs over or falls back is the whole forecast.