Sterling Hits Fresh 2026 Low Near 1.3145 as Fortress Dollar and Downing Street Vacuum Bite; 1.3320 Reclaim Needed to Break the Bearish Tone
GBP/USD sits 5% below its 1.3850 January high after the prime minister's resignation and the Fed's hawkish June signal drove a fresh low near 1.3145 | That's TradingNEWS
Key Points
- GBP/USD struck a fresh 2026 low near 1.3145 and trades near 1.3220, below its 50-day and 200-day SMAs near 1.34.
- A hawkish-Fed dollar, the UK PM's resignation, and a BoE on hold at 3.75% form a triple headwind for sterling.
- Support sits at 1.3140, then 1.3000; resistance is 1.3320 and the 1.3450 mid-June highs ahead of Thursday's US jobs report.
GBP/USD is pinned near the bottom of its 2026 range. GBP/USD traded around 1.3220 into Monday, advancing modestly toward 1.3250 after striking a fresh 2026 low near 1.3145 last week. The pair is flat-to-firmer on the session as the dollar's uptrend falters and the desk takes profit ahead of a heavy catalyst week, but the recovery is fragile — sterling sits at the soft end of a range that has been grinding lower since the hawkish Fed turn and a UK-specific political shock collided in mid-June.
The pound faces three headwinds at once, and that confluence is what drove the fresh low. The dollar has been strengthened by the Fed's hawkish June signal, UK political uncertainty has spiked following the prime minister's resignation, and the Bank of England sits frozen — neither cutting nor hiking, which removes any near-term directional catalyst for sterling. When the dollar firms, the domestic politics deteriorate, and the central bank offers no support all at the same time, the pound has no source of strength to lean on.
The Monday bounce is a dollar story, not a sterling one. The pair recovered ground as the broad dollar uptrend stalled and the crowd resorted to profit-taking ahead of Tuesday's US-Iran peace talks and the new Fed chair's Wednesday appearance at the European Central Bank forum. The latest agreement to halt the weekend attacks in the Strait of Hormuz steadied risk appetite at the margin, but sterling's upside attempts stay capped until the political picture clears and the dollar's bid genuinely breaks.
The thesis for this forecast is direct: GBP/USD is in a downtrend, trading below its key moving averages near 1.3220, pressed by a fortress dollar and a UK political vacuum while a structural gilt-yield prop limits the downside. The 1.3140–1.3195 zone is the line that matters — hold it and the dollar profit-taking can lift cable toward 1.3320; lose it on a daily close and the November 2025 lows near 1.3000 come into view. Thursday's US jobs report and the July 29 Fed and July 30 BoE meetings make the next stretch decisive. Until then, rallies are sold in a pair the dollar controls.
The Price Scoreboard: From 1.3850 To The 2026 Low
The pullback from the January peak frames the whole picture. GBP/USD reached its 2026 high near 1.3824–1.3850 in late January, driven by the dollar-weakness narrative that simultaneously took the euro above 1.20 — expectations the Fed would keep cutting while the BoE held at a relatively high rate, with two dissenting BoE members already voting to hike providing additional carry support. From that peak, the pair has retreated roughly 5% to the current 1.3220 zone, the lower end of its yearly range.
The path down has been punctuated by sharp risk-off shocks. The Strait of Hormuz conflict and US tariff threats drove a broad risk-off episode in March, taking cable back to approximately 1.29 and erasing most of the year's gains in a matter of weeks. The pound recovered through April and May as ceasefire hopes improved sentiment, climbing back to the mid-1.34s, before the mid-June cluster of events reshaped the outlook and drove the fresh leg lower toward last week's 1.3145 low.
The 2026 range is wide and now skewed lower. The pair has traded between the January high near 1.3850 and last week's fresh low near 1.3145 — a span of roughly 700 pips that captures the violent swings between the dollar-weakness rallies and the risk-off and political shocks. Sterling weakened roughly 0.58% against the dollar over the prior month and sits modestly lower year-on-year, having round-tripped from a strong start to a position near the bottom of the range.
The level that anchors everything near term is the 1.3140–1.3145 zone, last week's fresh 2026 low. That level now functions as the critical floor, the line that separates a contained correction from a deeper breakdown toward the psychological 1.3000 handle. The pair recovered from 1.3145 to trade near 1.3220, but each bounce has been capped by overhead resistance and the persistent dollar bid. Above the spot, the path runs into a wall of moving averages; below 1.3140, the November 2025 lows open. Every forex desk has the 1.3140 line circled as the pivot.
The Dollar Wrecking Ball: Hawkish Fed, Risk-Off Bid
The dollar is the dominant force pressing on cable, and it has come from two directions at once. The greenback surged through the first half of last week, catching bids as the Fed's hawkish shift following its June meeting continued to underpin demand. The central bank held at 3.50–3.75% but signaled hikes rather than cuts, erasing the rate-cut speculation that had powered sterling's earlier strength and lifting the dollar to fresh multi-month highs against most peers.
The second leg of dollar strength was the risk-off flow. A sharp sell-off in global technology stocks amid growing AI-bubble concerns sent capital into the safe-haven dollar, with the resulting risk-off flows helping propel the greenback higher. The combination of a hawkish rate signal and a flight to safety is a potent one for the dollar — it draws both yield-seeking and haven flows simultaneously, and both worked against the pound during the fresh low. Sterling, as a growth-sensitive currency, gets sold hardest when risk appetite drains.
The Monday reprieve reflects a stalling dollar, not a turn. The pair recovered as the dollar uptrend faltered and the crowd took profit ahead of the week's events, with a broad dollar retreat helping limit the downside across the majors. But the relief is tactical — the structural drivers behind the dollar's strength, the hawkish Fed and the residual risk-off tone, remain intact. The dollar's pause gives sterling room to bounce toward 1.3250, but a sustained recovery requires the greenback's bid to genuinely break.
The dollar's grip is the single biggest factor capping the pound. With the Fed holding above 3.75% and the rate-hike signal intact, cable has struggled to mount any durable rally, and the dollar firmness is the main thing keeping it pinned near the 2026 lows. For GBP/USD to recover meaningfully, the dollar has to roll over — and that requires a dovish repricing of the Fed that the current data hasn't delivered. Until the greenback cracks, the pound stays on the back foot, with the political vacuum at home compounding the pressure.
The UK Political Shock: A Resignation And A Vacuum
The factor that makes sterling's plight distinct from the broader dollar story is the UK political shock. The prime minister's resignation triggered a political uncertainty shock that hit the pound directly, removing the policy stability that had underpinned sterling and opening a leadership vacuum at the worst possible moment. Political uncertainty is poison for a currency, and the resignation landed just as the dollar was surging, amplifying the downside and driving the fresh 2026 low.
The transition is the source of the lingering pressure. The incoming leadership figure is set to enter Downing Street, and the pound's upside attempts will stay limited until the new prime minister defines a political agenda. The market is in a holding pattern, unable to price the direction of UK policy until the new government's priorities become clear. That uncertainty is a unique sterling headwind that the euro and other majors don't share, and it's why the pound has underperformed even on days when the dollar softened.
The fiscal question is the specific risk the market is watching. The crowd is keenly focused on who the incoming leader appoints as chancellor, and if the pick is seen to favor increased borrowing to fund more spending, a rise in gilt yields could deliver a shock to sterling. The UK's fiscal credibility has been a recurring concern, and a spending-heavy fiscal stance that drives gilt yields higher for the wrong reasons — fiscal risk rather than growth — would pressure the pound rather than support it. The chancellor appointment is the next domestic catalyst that could move cable sharply.
The political overhang sets a ceiling on any recovery. Even with the dollar pausing and gilt yields offering a structural prop, the leadership vacuum caps sterling's upside until the new government establishes credibility. A smooth transition with a fiscally credible chancellor would remove the headwind and allow the pound to rally on its yield advantage; a chaotic transition or a borrowing-heavy fiscal signal would deepen the underperformance. The political risk is the wildcard that makes sterling more vulnerable than its rate differential alone would suggest, and it's why the pound sits at the bottom of its range.
The Bank Of England On Hold: No Directional Catalyst
The central bank offers sterling neither support nor a clear direction, and that limbo is itself a headwind. The Bank of England held its key rate at 3.75% in a 7–2 vote at its June meeting, with two members wanting to hike rather than cut. A central bank that is neither cutting nor hiking removes the near-term directional catalyst that typically drives a currency, leaving the pound captive to external forces — chiefly the dollar and the domestic politics.
The dissent is the constructive nuance in the BoE picture. Two members voting to hike signals a hawkish tilt within the committee, providing a floor under sterling via the carry-demand argument — the same dynamic that supported the pound at its January highs. The BoE has been cutting more cautiously than either the Fed or the ECB, leaving Bank Rate at 3.75% versus the Fed's equivalent 3.50–3.75% and the ECB's 2.25%. That cautious stance preserves sterling's yield advantage against the euro and keeps it roughly matched with the dollar.
The growth backdrop complicates the BoE's path. The UK economy has shown sluggish momentum — soft GDP growth, a house-price drop of 0.6% in May that was the sharpest monthly decline since the prior year, and a fragile labor market. That weak growth argues against further hikes even with inflation concerns, which is why the BoE is stuck on hold rather than tightening. The energy-price vulnerability from the Middle East conflict added a hawkish complication, but the de-escalation has eased that pressure, leaving the BoE without a compelling reason to move in either direction.
The on-hold stance leaves sterling adrift. Without a rate cut to weaken it or a hike to strengthen it, the pound trades on the dollar and the politics rather than on its own central bank. The July 30 BoE meeting is the next scheduled event that could break the limbo — a hawkish surprise or fresh dissent would support sterling, while a dovish shift toward cuts would deepen the slide. Until then, the BoE provides a floor through its relative caution but no catalyst for a rally, and the pound stays range-bound at the soft end.
The Gilt-Yield Prop: A Structural Sterling Bid
Beneath the bearish price action sits a structural support that separates this correction from a collapse: the UK's yield advantage. UK 10-year gilt yields sit at 4.75%, roughly 35 to 45 basis points above equivalent US Treasuries, creating genuine structural demand for sterling-denominated assets. Pension funds, insurance companies, and sovereign wealth funds that must hold gilts to match their liabilities have to buy pounds to acquire them, generating a steady, price-insensitive bid that cushions sterling's drawdowns.
The yield premium is a meaningful prop in a low-divergence environment. With the major central banks' rates having converged — the BoE at 3.75%, the Fed at 3.50–3.75%, the ECB at 2.25% — the gilt-Treasury spread is one of the few sources of relative yield appeal sterling retains. The 35-to-45-basis-point premium over Treasuries makes UK government debt attractive to the global fixed-income community, and that demand for gilts translates directly into demand for pounds, underpinning the currency even as the dollar firms.
The configuration gives sterling a mixed cross-rate picture. The pound holds a 150-basis-point yield advantage over the euro after the ECB's June hike to 2.25%, and a massive advantage over the yen, supporting sterling against those currencies even as it struggles against the dollar. The yield structure is why cable's weakness has been more about dollar strength than sterling weakness — against the euro and yen, the pound has held up far better, reflecting the underlying yield support that the dollar's surge has masked.
The prop sets a floor, not a direction. The gilt-yield demand can cushion the decline and slow the bleed, but it can't reverse a trend driven by the dollar and the domestic politics. The structural bid buys on weakness over months, supporting the price gradually, but does little to arrest a dollar-driven slide over days. For the near-term forecast, the gilt prop argues the downside is bounded — a disorderly collapse is unlikely while the yield advantage draws structural demand — but it offers no protection against further grinding losses if the dollar stays bid and the political vacuum persists. The floor is real; it's just lower than the bulls want.
The Oil Angle: A De-Escalation Tailwind For The Pound
The Middle East situation has been a double-edged factor for sterling, and the recent de-escalation tilts it toward support. The UK is vulnerable to energy shocks, and the Strait of Hormuz conflict that drove oil prices sharply higher earlier in the year had weighed on UK economic sentiment and the pound. Elevated energy costs threatened to squeeze UK growth and complicate the BoE's path, a combination that pressured growth-sensitive sterling during the worst of the conflict.
The de-escalation reverses that pressure. The latest agreement to halt the weekend attacks in the Strait, combined with the restart of US-Iran peace talks, has eased the energy-supply fear that had inflated oil prices and weighed on the UK outlook. Crude's retreat toward pre-war levels removes a headwind for the energy-importing UK economy, supporting sentiment and, at the margin, the pound. A sustained drop in oil prices eases the UK's terms-of-trade pressure and reduces the stagflationary risk that had clouded the BoE's decisions.
The fragility of the truce keeps the risk two-sided. The weekend violence — a tanker strike near the Strait and US retaliation — showed how quickly the situation can deteriorate, and any re-escalation that spikes oil would revive the headwind for sterling. The UK's energy vulnerability means a renewed oil shock would hit the pound harder than most majors, given the inflation-and-growth squeeze it would create. The Tuesday Doha talks are the catalyst that determines whether the energy tailwind persists or reverses.
The net effect of the de-escalation is mildly supportive. With oil retreating and the war premium draining, one of the headwinds that pressured sterling earlier in the year has eased, removing a source of downside. But the energy tailwind is secondary to the dominant dollar and political drivers, and it can't override them. A durable Middle East peace would help the pound by easing the UK growth outlook, while a re-escalation would compound the existing headwinds. For now, the de-escalation is a modest positive that has helped steady risk appetite and limit cable's downside, even as the bigger forces keep it pinned near the lows.
The Technical Structure: Below The Moving Averages
The technical picture shows cable trading below its key averages in a bearish structure. The pair sits below both its 50-day simple moving average near 1.34 and its 200-day SMA near 1.34, with both averages positioned above the current price as overhead resistance. A pair trading beneath its major moving averages, with those averages clustered above it, is the textbook profile of a downtrend, and it confirms sellers retain control of the structure.
The shorter-term picture reinforces the weakness. The pair continues to trade below its 50-period EMA, which acts as dynamic resistance, after breaking below pivotal support levels in the recent slide. The break below the 1.3245 support and the earlier 1.3320 level confirmed the downside continuation, and each recovery attempt has been capped near the broken supports that have flipped to resistance. The dominant short-term bearish trend keeps the selling pressure firmly in place.
The signal aggregators lean bearish. One model running technical indicators finds 19 bearish signals against just 7 bullish, reflecting the pair's position below its moving averages and within the descending structure. The 50-day SMA is estimated to slide toward 1.32 by late July, confirming the downward drift in the trend-following indicators. The bearish bias dominates the daily and intraday charts, with the pair making lower highs and lower lows in the recent sessions.
The reclaim level that would crack the structure is the 1.3320 zone. That area — combining the June 8 and June 11 lows with the June 18 high — is the first significant resistance, and a sustained move above it would ease the bearish tone and open the path toward the mid-June highs near 1.3440–1.3450. Until cable reclaims 1.3320 on rising volume, the technical bias stays corrective, and the structure points lower toward the 1.3140 floor. The Monday recovery toward 1.3250 is an attempt to stabilize, but it has to clear 1.3320 to signal the downtrend is breaking.
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The Downside Map: 1.3145, Then 1.3000
The support structure beneath the spot is well defined, and the first line is last week's low. The 1.3145 level — the fresh 2026 low from which the pair recovered — paired with the session lows near 1.3195, forms the immediate support zone. The pair has tested toward it and bounced, making the 1.3140–1.3195 band the line that separates a contained correction from a deeper breakdown. A daily close below 1.3140 would confirm the floor is giving way.
Below 1.3140, the targets stack toward the psychological handle. Last week's horizontal floor at 1.3140 guards the path toward the November 2025 lows near the 1.3000 psychological level — a roughly 140-pip drop that would represent a complete loss of the 2026 range floor. One forecasting model projects the pair dipping toward 1.32 over the coming days, clustering the near-term downside in the 1.31–1.32 band, with a break of 1.3140 opening the move toward 1.31 and then 1.3000.
The deeper downside reflects the bearish scenario. If the dollar's bid extends and the UK political vacuum deepens, cable could probe below 1.3000 toward the 1.29 zone tested during the March risk-off episode. One model's 2026 range spans 1.25 to 1.32, with an average near 1.29, capturing the bear case where a hawkish Fed and UK fiscal risk drive the pound toward the low-1.30s and below. The most cautious bank forecast sees the pair at 1.28 by December, a level that would require the dollar to stay firm and the UK politics to remain unstable.
For the forecast, the downside hinges on 1.3140. As long as that level holds on a closing basis, the gilt-yield prop and the dollar profit-taking keep a relief bounce in play. A confirmed break shifts the framework: the 1.3000 handle activates, the political risk gains a louder voice, and the 1.29 zone comes into view. The desk should treat the 1.3140–1.3195 zone as the pivot — the area that determines whether the pair bounces off the 2026 low or extends the slide toward the psychological 1.3000 level. The downside is bounded by the gilt prop but real if the dollar stays bid.
The Upside Map: The Reclaim Path To 1.3450
The resistance structure above the spot is dense, and it explains why every bounce has stalled. The first hurdle sits at 1.3250, the level the Monday recovery is pushing toward, where the dollar profit-taking has lifted the pair off its lows. A clean break above 1.3250 would signal the recovery has legs, opening the path toward the next resistance band. These are the near-term gates any bounce must clear to gain traction against the dollar's grip.
The cluster that defines the trend sits higher. The 1.3320 area — combining the June 8 and June 11 lows with the June 18 high — is the first significant resistance, and a move through it would ease the bearish tone. Above that, the mid-June highs at 1.3440–1.3450 mark the next hurdle, reinforced by the 50-day and 200-day moving averages clustered near 1.34. A sustained move through the 1.3320-to-1.3450 band would be the first technical evidence that the downtrend is breaking and the pair is reclaiming its moving averages.
The path beyond 1.3450 leads toward the recovery targets. The mid-1.34s zone the pair held through April and May sits as the next objective, and above it the bank consensus targets cluster — Goldman at 1.36, Scotiabank at 1.37 — for the year-end. A reclaim of 1.35 and a sustained move higher would put those targets in play, though they require the dollar to weaken as the bulls expect. These are a long way up from current spot, which is why the near-term forecast focuses on the 1.3250-to-1.3450 band.
The mechanism for an upside surprise requires a catalyst. A positive trigger — progress on the UK leadership transition, US inflation surprising to the downside, or further Middle East de-escalation — could push cable back above 1.34–1.35. The gilt-yield prop and the BoE dissent provide the structural support, but the bounce needs the dollar to roll over to extend. A soft US jobs print on Thursday that trims the Fed-hike bets would weigh on the dollar and lift the pair toward 1.3320 and beyond. Without that catalyst, the wall of moving averages caps every rally, and the pair stays trapped below the levels it needs to reclaim.
Momentum And Sentiment: Bearish, With A Recovery Attempt
The momentum picture shows a pair in a bearish structure attempting a tactical recovery. The pair remains under a dominant short-term bearish trend, trading below its EMA50 with persistent selling pressure, and the recent breaks below pivotal supports confirmed the downside momentum. The composite signal reads tilt bearish, with one model logging 19 bearish indicators against 7 bullish — a lopsided balance that confirms sellers retain control of the daily and intraday timeframes.
The recovery attempt is dollar-driven, not sterling-led. The pair starts the week on a firmer note and advances toward 1.3250 as the dollar uptrend falters and the crowd takes profit ahead of the week's events. That bounce off the 1.3145 low reflects a tactical unwind of dollar longs rather than a fundamental shift in sterling's favor, which is why it has been capped near the overhead resistance. The momentum improvement is fragile and contingent on the dollar's pause holding through the data.
The positioning backdrop adds a cautionary note. Options markets have signaled strong positioning against sterling, particularly versus the dollar, reflecting the bearish consensus on the pair. Crowded short positioning can amplify a squeeze higher if a positive catalyst appears — a soft US jobs print or a smooth UK transition could force a sharper bounce than the fundamentals alone would justify. But it also confirms the market's bearish lean, and until the catalyst turns, the short positioning reflects the prevailing pressure rather than a contrarian opportunity.
The resolution depends on the catalyst week. The momentum complex stays bearish while the pair trades below its moving averages, but the oversold tactical setup and the dollar profit-taking leave room for a relief bounce. If Thursday's jobs print disappoints and the dollar rolls over, the recovery toward 1.3320 can extend; if the data runs hot and the dollar firms, the pair retests 1.3140 and the bearish momentum reasserts. The momentum is a setup contingent on external triggers, and the bias stays to fade rallies until the dollar's bid genuinely breaks and the UK political picture clears.
The Cross Rates: Sterling Holds Up Away From The Dollar
The cross-rate picture reveals that sterling's weakness is largely a dollar story rather than a pound story. Against the euro, the pound holds a 150-basis-point yield advantage after the ECB's June hike to 2.25%, supporting GBP/EUR in a 0.8550–0.8850 band. The BoE-ECB gap has narrowed from its wider levels but still favors sterling, and a further ECB hike in July or September without a matching BoE move would push the cross toward the softer end — though the UK political instability is an additional headwind specific to this pair.
Against the yen, sterling holds a massive yield advantage. The pound's edge over the yen exceeds 275 basis points, supporting GBP/JPY in a ¥192–¥205 band even as the Bank of Japan's slow normalization journey — from negative rates in 2022 to 1.00% by June 2026 — gradually compresses the carry trade that drove the cross to historically elevated levels. The pound was the strongest major against the yen on the session, underscoring how sterling's struggles are concentrated against the dollar rather than broad-based weakness.
The yield configuration explains the divergence. The BoE held Bank Rate at 3.75% while cutting more cautiously than peers, leaving sterling with a yield advantage against the euro and yen and a rough match with the dollar. That structure means cable's slide reflects dollar strength rather than sterling weakness — the pound has held up far better against the euro and yen, which is why the gilt-yield prop and the carry demand have cushioned the currency even as it struggles against the surging greenback.
The cross-rate read frames the recovery potential. If the dollar rolls over as the bulls expect, sterling's underlying yield support positions it to rally on its carry advantage, with the cross rates already reflecting that relative strength. The pound isn't structurally weak; it's caught against a dollar that has surged on the hawkish Fed and the risk-off flows. The cross rates tell the desk that when the dollar's bid breaks, sterling has the yield foundation to recover — the question is when the greenback cracks, and the political vacuum at home doesn't accelerate it.
The Catalyst Week And The Bank Targets
The calendar loads the next stretch with binary risk. Tuesday brings the US-Iran peace talks in Doha, a catalyst for the risk tone and the dollar's safe-haven bid. Wednesday features the new Fed chair's appearance at the European Central Bank forum, where any hawkish or dovish guidance could move the dollar sharply. Thursday delivers the US June jobs report — pulled forward ahead of the July 4 holiday — the single most important release for the pair, with consensus pointing to a marked drop in jobs added that could trim Fed-hike bets and weigh on the dollar.
The jobs print is the pivotal event. A soft payroll number would trim the Fed-hike pricing, weaken the dollar, and lift cable toward 1.3320 and beyond. A strong print — and recent reports have generally outpaced forecasts — would extend the dollar's momentum and press the pair back toward 1.3140. The data-dependency cuts both ways, and with the dollar's recent surge built on the hawkish Fed signal, the jobs report is the variable that confirms or breaks that narrative.
The bigger swing factors sit at month-end. The July 29 Fed meeting and the July 30 BoE decision, a day apart, are the next major scheduled event risks. The Fed meeting could deliver or defer the signaled hike, while the BoE decision could break the central bank's on-hold limbo with fresh dissent or a dovish shift. These two decisions will resolve the central question hanging over the pair — whether the dollar's yield advantage extends or the BoE's relative caution reasserts sterling's support.
The bank targets lean modestly bullish on a dollar-weakness thesis. Most major institutions project the pair higher than current levels by year-end — one at 1.36, another at 1.37, with a bull case at 1.47 — primarily on the assumption the dollar weakens as Fed expectations normalize. The most cautious sees 1.28 by December. The H2 base case spans 1.32 to 1.41, capturing the disagreement between the bears who see continued dollar strength and the bulls who expect the greenback to roll over. The realization depends on the Fed easing and the UK politics stabilizing — neither of which is assured.
The Verdict: Bearish-To-Neutral, 1.3140 The Line
Cable earns a bearish-to-neutral grade, and the desk should respect the dollar's grip over sterling's yield support. The dominant theme is unambiguous — the pound struck a fresh 2026 low near 1.3145 last week and trades near 1.3220, pressed by a triple headwind: a dollar strengthened by the hawkish Fed and risk-off flows, a UK political vacuum following the prime minister's resignation, and a Bank of England frozen on hold with no directional catalyst. The pair sits below its 50-day and 200-day moving averages near 1.34, confirming a downtrend.
The constructive elements are real but capped. The gilt-yield prop — UK 10-year yields at 4.75%, 35 to 45 basis points above Treasuries — generates structural sterling demand that bounds the downside. The BoE's two hawkish dissenters provide a floor via carry demand, and the Middle East de-escalation eases the UK energy headwind. The cross rates show sterling holding up against the euro and yen, confirming the weakness is a dollar story. The Monday recovery toward 1.3250 on dollar profit-taking hints the bounce can extend. None of it overcomes a firm dollar while the political vacuum persists.
The forecast resolves to one zone. The 1.3140–1.3195 support is the pivot that governs everything: hold it and the dollar profit-taking plus the gilt prop can lift cable toward 1.3320 and the 1.3450 mid-June highs; lose it and the 1.3000 handle activates, with the 1.29 zone in play if the dollar stays bid and the politics deteriorate. The 1.3320 resistance is the level the pair must reclaim to ease the bearish tone, and it sits below it. Thursday's jobs report, the Wednesday Fed-chair forum appearance, and the July 29 Fed and July 30 BoE decisions are the catalysts that break the range. The verdict: bearish-to-neutral, with the dollar and UK politics pointing lower but the gilt-yield prop and BoE caution bounding the downside. Until 1.3140 breaks or 1.3320 reclaims, rallies are sold in a pair the greenback and the Downing Street vacuum control.