See also
The GBP/USD currency pair traded with low volatility and primarily moved sideways. As mentioned earlier, last week was particularly interesting in how the market interpreted various events and publications. The market largely ignored important U.S. macroeconomic data on business activity, employment, and unemployment, yet responded to the emotional statements of British Chancellor Rachel Reeves. We maintain our view that the U.S. dollar currently has no real prospects for strong growth. After Friday and Saturday's developments involving Donald Trump, his legislative initiative, and Elon Musk, these prospects have diminished even further.
The only factor that could point to potential strengthening of the dollar is technical analysis. On the hourly timeframe, the price remains below the critical line. However, it's not declining—it simply stays below this reference point. In fact, over the past few days, the price has been edging closer to the Kijun-sen line, and will likely move above it in the coming week, thereby neutralizing any remaining technical support for the dollar. Fundamentally and globally, the U.S. currency lacks demand in the market due to well-known reasons we have been discussing for several months.
Surprisingly, one sell signal did form on Friday. Moreover, it even provided an opportunity for traders to profit. Early in the European session, the pair rebounded from the 1.3674–1.3681 level and then fell by 20–25 points. Traders could have captured this short-term move with a short position.
The COT (Commitment of Traders) reports for the British pound show that commercial traders' sentiment has fluctuated significantly in recent years. The red and blue lines, which represent net positions of commercial and non-commercial traders, often intersect and typically stay near the zero mark. Currently, they remain close together, suggesting that buying and selling volumes are roughly balanced. However, the net position has been gradually increasing over the past 18 months.
The dollar continues to weaken due to Donald Trump's policies, so market maker demand for the pound is not especially relevant at the moment. The trade war is expected to continue in one form or another, and the Federal Reserve may cut its key rate more aggressively than justified by economic fundamentals. As a result, demand for the dollar is likely to decline further.
According to the latest COT report on the British pound, the "Non-commercial" group closed 6.4k buy positions and 2.0k sell positions. This led to a reduction of the net long position by 8.4k during the reporting week—though this has minimal significance in the broader context.
In 2025, the pound will rise significantly—but the primary reason for this is Donald Trump's policies. Once this factor is removed, the dollar may start to recover. However, no one knows when that might happen. Trump's presidency has only just begun, and the next four years could bring many more disruptions.
GBP/USD 1H Analysis
On the hourly timeframe, the GBP/USD pair experienced a sharp decline on Wednesday last week, but generally recovered in the following sessions. This means the British pound lost very little overall and is likely to rebound in the coming week. To do so, it needs to break above the critical line. The price also failed to consolidate below the Senkou Span B line, which is why we do not yet see a reason to consider the uptrend broken.
Key Trading Levels for July 7:
Support and resistance levels:1.3212, 1.3288, 1.3358, 1.3439, 1.3489, 1.3537, 1.3615, 1.3741–1.3763, 1.3833, 1.3886.
Ichimoku indicator lines:Senkou Span B (1.3569) and Kijun-sen (1.3674) may also serve as signal levels.
A Stop Loss should be moved to breakeven once the price moves 20 points in the correct direction. Ichimoku lines may shift throughout the day, which should be considered when identifying trading signals.
On Monday, no significant economic events are scheduled in either the UK or the US. Therefore, low-volatility trading may persist today. However, don't forget about the developments from Friday and Saturday, which may still be reflected in Monday's charts.
Chart Legend and Notation:
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*The market analysis posted here is meant to increase your awareness, but not to give instructions to make a trade.
Analysis of Wednesday's Trades 1H Chart of GBP/USD On Wednesday, the GBP/USD pair continued a weak downward movement, which is based purely on technical factors. While there was no macroeconomic
Analysis of Wednesday's Trades 1H Chart of EUR/USD On Wednesday, the EUR/USD currency pair continued to move with minimal volatility and without a clear direction. More precisely, there
On Wednesday, the GBP/USD pair continued a weak downward move, which has a corrective character. The price consolidated below the ascending trendline, so the decline was expected. A decline
Analysis of Tuesday's Trades 1H Chart of GBP/USD On Tuesday, the GBP/USD pair traded with a slight decline, which was not triggered by any events or reports. The ascending trendline
Analysis of Tuesday's Trades 1H Chart of EUR/USD On Tuesday, the EUR/USD pair traded intraday in both directions with minimal volatility. The macroeconomic and fundamental background remains absent, leaving
The EUR/USD currency pair continued to trade on Tuesday with minimal volatility, without support from macroeconomic or fundamental background, and strictly sideways. As we expected, the U.S. construction sector reports
The GBP/USD currency pair on Tuesday generally maintained the downward tendency of recent days. Unlike EUR/USD, GBP/USD is showing at least some movement. Naturally, this movement is corrective. A consolidation
Analysis of Monday's Trades 1H Chart of GBP/USD On Monday, the GBP/USD pair also traded lower and broke through its ascending trendline. After two weeks of growth, a technical correction
Analysis of Monday's Trades 1H Chart of EUR/USD On Monday, the EUR/USD currency pair began a new wave of decline, which had nothing to do with fundamentals or macroeconomics. During
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