Geopolitical Risk And Sterling Pressure
Looking back to this time in 2025, we recall the significant risk-off sentiment driven by the US-Israel conflict with Iran. This uncertainty pushed the Pound down to near 1.3360 against the dollar as demand for riskier assets faded. The market environment was defined by geopolitical anxiety. At that point in early 2025, oil prices had spiked to over $95 a barrel, fueling inflation fears and making the Bank of England hesitant. Today, with geopolitical tensions having eased, Brent crude has stabilized around a much healthier $78 a barrel. This has been a key factor in bringing UK inflation down from its 2025 peak to the latest reading of 2.8%. This contrasts sharply with the Bank of England’s dilemma last year, where the March 2025 decision was a close call, ultimately resulting in them holding rates due to those inflation risks. Now, the landscape is entirely different, with markets pricing in an 85% probability of a 25 basis point rate cut later this month. The case for a cut is now much clearer than it was a year ago. For derivatives traders, this means the nature of the trade has changed. Implied volatility on GBP/USD options is lower now, as the BoE’s path is more predictable than it was during the 2025 uncertainty. Traders might consider strategies like buying put options to speculate on a dovish repricing, as the expected rate cut could weigh on Sterling in the short term.Implications For Options And Positioning
Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.
Start trading now – Click here to create your real VT Markets account