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Abstract:Provisional UK Q2 GDP showed the economy contracted in the second quarter as manufacturing output fell. Sterling moved lower but the falls are currently limited.
UK Q2 GDP and Sterling (GBP) Pairs - Prices, Charts and Analysis:
The UK economy contracts in the second quarter, missing expectations.
UK trade deficit narrows markedly.
Q3 2019 Currency Forecasts andTop Trading Opportunities
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The first look at UK second quarter GDP showed the economy contracting after a fairly robust start to the year. Q2GDP fell to -0.2%, missing expectations of 0.0% and a first quarter reading of 0.5%. On an annualized basis, GDP slipped to 1.2% from a prior 1.8%.
Commenting on the figures, ONS head of GDP Rob Kent Smith commented, “GDP contracted in the second quarter for the first time since 2012 after robust growth in the first quarter. Manufacturing output fell back after a strong start to the year, with production brought forward ahead of the UKs original departure date from the EU.The construction sector also weakened after a buoyant beginning to the year, while the often-dominant service sector delivered virtually no growth at all.”
It was not all bad news as the UK trade deficit narrowed, as imports fell following a sharp rise in Q1 ahead of the UKs original departure from the EU, according to the ONS.
After slipping lower on the release, Sterling picked up to show just a small loss on the day although GBP remains weak and may be vulnerable to further sell-offs. GBPUSD remains above last Thursdays low print at 1.2079 – the lowest level since January 2017 – but remains at risk of further sell-offs, especially if the US dollar picks up.
GBPUSD Price Chart (January – August 9, 2019)
Retail traders are 77.7% net-long GBPUSD according to the latest IG Client Sentiment Data, a bearish contrarian indicator. However recent daily and weekly positional changes suggest that GBPUSD may soon reverse higher.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
GBPUSD has just hit its highest level since late-July and is eyeing further gains on a combination of a marginally stronger Sterling complex and a weak US dollar.
After opening the session in negative territory, GBPUSD performed a quick U-turn after UK manufacturing, industrial production and monthly GDP data all beat expectations. And over in Ireland, UK PM Boris Johnson was in a more conciliatory mood.
The British Pound slipped lower on talk that the UK government is looking to suspend Parliament from mid-September (proroguing), limiting the time that Remainers have to stop a no-deal Brexit.
Sterling (GBP) is little changed after slightly better-than-expected UK wages and Labour data as Brexit remains the driver of the British Pound.