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MUFG’s Lee Hardman says political risks and yields pressure sterling, keeping GBP/USD and EUR/GBP near 1.3500, 0.8700

The Pound (GBP) fell over the past week, alongside the US Dollar (USD) and Euro (EUR). Despite this, GBP/USD and EUR/GBP stayed fairly steady near 1.3500 and 0.8700.

Sterling weakened as UK bond yields dropped sharply. This followed markets scaling back expectations for Bank of England (BoE) rate rises.

BoE Governor Andrew Bailey said markets had moved too quickly on rate-rise bets. He also said it was too early to make firm judgments.

The comments point to rates likely being kept unchanged at the BoE meeting at the end of the month. UK political uncertainty, linked to upcoming local elections, was also cited as a pressure on the currency.

The pound has been one of the G10’s worst performers in recent weeks, pressured by both political talk and a shift in interest rate expectations. We are seeing a sharp drop in UK government bond yields as the market starts to price in potential rate cuts later this year, even with recent inflation figures holding firm. This situation is making the pound less attractive to hold.

This pattern is familiar to what we saw in mid-2025 when uncertainty also weakened the currency. With the latest UK inflation report showing consumer prices still elevated at 3.1%, the recent drop in the 10-year gilt yield to 3.9% signals that traders are now more concerned about a potential economic slowdown. This is capping any strength in the pound, keeping GBP/USD trading near 1.2450.

For derivative traders, this environment suggests buying GBP put options to hedge against a sharper decline. Such a move would be a direct play on the risk of negative political headlines or a surprisingly dovish turn from the Bank of England in its next meeting. This strategy provides a clear, risk-defined way to profit from a potential sell-off.

The increased uncertainty also means we can expect bigger price swings, or volatility, in the currency. Traders could consider selling out-of-the-money GBP call options, collecting the premium with the view that political headwinds will prevent any significant rally in the short term. This is a bet that the pound will remain range-bound or drift lower in the coming weeks.

Looking at the EUR/GBP cross, currently stable around 0.8650, suggests another opportunity. A long volatility trade, like a straddle, could be beneficial. This position would profit from a large price move in either direction, which could be triggered if either the Bank of England or the European Central Bank is forced to make a decisive policy shift before the other.

Rabobank’s Jane Foley says Ueda’s IMF caution cooled earlier hawkishness, fuelling doubts over April BoJ hikes

Comments from Governor Ueda earlier in the year suggested a move towards tighter policy, but his remarks at the IMF meetings in Washington were more cautious. This shift led some forecasters to question whether the Bank of Japan will raise rates at its 28 April policy meeting.

A Reuters survey found that 2/3rds of Bank of Japan watchers expect a rate rise by the end of June. The survey also indicated that the chances of a move in April or June were viewed as similar.

Recent domestic data showed February real wages rose 1.9% year on year, the second monthly increase in a row. This is being monitored as a sign of firmer domestic demand conditions.

Japan’s national CPI inflation figures for March are due on 24 April. The release is expected to be closely watched by policymakers when considering the near-term policy path.

Governor Ueda’s cautious tone at the recent IMF meetings has clouded the outlook for an April rate hike. This has shifted expectations, with many of us now seeing the June policy meeting as an equally likely time for the Bank of Japan to move. This growing uncertainty is creating opportunities in the derivatives market.

The indecision is being priced into yen options, where we’ve seen one-month implied volatility on USD/JPY climb to 11.5% from around 9.0% just a couple of weeks ago. This tells us the market is preparing for a significant move in the yen, regardless of whether the BoJ acts on April 28 or not. Traders should anticipate this elevated volatility to persist through the upcoming policy meeting.

All eyes are now on the national Consumer Price Index data due this Friday, April 24. We are looking for the core inflation reading, which is forecast to hit 2.7%, to see if it confirms the strength shown in February’s 1.9% real wage growth. A higher-than-expected inflation number would put an April rate hike firmly back on the table.

We remember the sharp yen appreciation that followed the policy normalization announcement back in October of 2025. That period showed us how quickly the market can reprice the currency once the central bank finally acts. Any signals from this week’s data or the BoJ statement could trigger a similarly rapid adjustment.

Therefore, buying volatility through instruments like USD/JPY straddles or strangles for late April expirations could be a prudent strategy. This approach profits from a large price swing in either direction without needing to correctly predict the BoJ’s decision. Should the CPI data come in exceptionally strong, more directional plays, such as buying yen call options, may become attractive.

RBC’s Abbey Xu says Canada’s inflation hit 2.4% annually, energy-driven, while core pressures eased overall

Canada’s headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose to 2.4% year-on-year. The increase was mainly linked to higher energy prices tied to conflict in the Middle East and to tax-related effects.

Bank of Canada core measures, including CPI-trim and CPI-median, pointed to easing underlying inflation. These measures exclude tax changes and volatile energy price swings.

Underlying Inflation Cooling

CPI-trim, CPI-median, and trim services excluding shelter averaged 1.7% on an annualised three-month rolling average basis. The share of products with larger-than-usual month-on-month price increases has been lower so far in 2026.

Some items, including grocery prices and rent, were still running at about 4% above year-ago levels. The March data indicates that higher oil prices may lift headline inflation in the near term without broadening price pressures.

The recent rise in headline inflation to 2.4% should be viewed as temporary, driven mostly by external energy shocks and tax effects. We see the Bank of Canada focusing on its own core measures, which have cooled to an average of 1.7% on a three-month annualized basis. This divergence, coupled with a soft economic backdrop, signals that the Bank is more likely to cut interest rates than to hold or raise them.

This creates an opportunity for traders to position for lower Canadian interest rates in the coming weeks. With the latest jobs report from early April 2026 showing the economy shed 15,000 jobs and the unemployment rate rising to 6.3%, the case for a rate cut at the June meeting is strengthening. Derivative strategies like buying options on CORRA futures or receiving fixed in interest rate swaps could prove profitable.

Trading Implications For Cad And Rates

Furthermore, this dovish outlook for Canada contrasts with the situation in the United States, where Federal Reserve officials remain cautious with their core inflation still hovering near 2.8%. This policy divergence is likely to put downward pressure on the Canadian dollar. Traders should consider strategies that benefit from a rising USD/CAD exchange rate, such as purchasing call options on the pair.

Looking back at how the Bank navigated the inflation spike in 2025, we know it prioritizes underlying trends over temporary headline volatility. The share of CPI components with unusually large price increases has been trending lower so far in 2026, reinforcing the view that the broader disinflationary trend is intact. This historical precedent supports the expectation that the Bank will look through the current headline figure.

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HSBC strategists cite volatile gold trading, then stabilising near USD 4,800, helped by a weaker Dollar

Gold prices have been volatile this year, moving between about USD 4,405 and USD 5,450 per ounce, then settling near USD 4,800. The peak was around USD 5,450 on 30 January and the low was around USD 4,405 on 23 March.

The fall was linked to heavy selling alongside US Dollar strength, higher US yields, higher oil prices, weaker equities, and the ongoing Middle East conflict. Since the escalation, markets have priced out at least 25bp of expected Federal Reserve easing by end-2026, which can weigh on gold.

Near Term Price Drivers

In the near term, gold has been trading on news flow, and foreign exchange has been sensitive to shifts in geopolitical risk. Higher tensions have tended to support the US Dollar, and lower tensions have tended to weaken it.

Over the longer term, a softer US Dollar and ongoing structural risks are expected to support gold. Factors cited include geopolitical risk, economic policy uncertainty, potential US Dollar weakness, shifts in the global order, and ongoing central bank demand.

Mine supply is expected to rise modestly in 2026–27, while recycling is expected to rise more after a muted response so far. High prices are reducing jewellery and coin buying, especially in price-sensitive emerging markets and increasingly in developed markets.

We’ve seen sharp volatility this year, with gold swinging from a record near $5,450 in January to a low around $4,405 in late March. The recent recovery to the $4,800 level suggests a period of consolidation after heavy liquidation. This price action indicates that traders should remain cautious of sudden, headline-driven moves in the immediate term.

Potential Trading Approaches

In the coming weeks, prices will likely remain sensitive to US economic data and shifts in geopolitical risk. The US Dollar Index has been trading firmly above 105, as the latest March CPI data showed inflation remains persistent at 3.1%, tempering expectations for near-term Federal Reserve rate cuts. This environment suggests that upside for gold may be limited for now.

Given this near-term uncertainty, traders could consider strategies that benefit from range-bound price action, such as selling out-of-the-money call options against a long position. This allows for generating income from premiums while waiting for a clearer directional trend to emerge. It capitalizes on the elevated volatility without taking on significant new directional risk.

However, the longer-term outlook remains supportive, based on an eventual softening of the US Dollar and strong central bank demand. We saw this continue from 2025, with recent Q1 2026 data confirming central banks added over 250 tonnes to their reserves. This underlying structural support provides a strong floor under the market.

To position for this eventual upward momentum, traders might look at purchasing longer-dated call options, for instance, those expiring in early 2027. This provides exposure to a potential rally later in the year, driven by a policy shift from the Fed or renewed geopolitical tensions. Using bull call spreads could also be an effective way to reduce the initial cost of this long-term bullish position.

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BNP Paribas forecasts Eurozone GDP rising to 1.6% in 2026, backed by German fiscal steps, defence and AI investment

BNP Paribas projects Eurozone GDP growth at 1.5% in 2025 and 1.6% in 2026. It expects growth to run at a steady quarterly pace of 0.5% through 2026.

The forecast is based on fiscal measures in Germany, higher military spending, and AI-related investment in Europe. It also assumes resilience in the labour market.

The bank includes an energy shock linked to developments in the Middle East. It expects this to lead to three ECB rate hikes in 2026, in June, July and September.

Under that scenario, the ECB deposit rate would rise to 2.75%. The bank says this tightening adds uncertainty to the growth outlook.

The article states it was produced with the help of an AI tool and reviewed by an editor.

Given the current date of April 20, 2026, we are seeing a complicated picture forming for the Eurozone economy. Underlying growth seems steady, supported by German fiscal policy, increased military spending, and investment in artificial intelligence. However, a new energy shock tied to recent escalations in the Middle East is changing the outlook rapidly.

The primary concern is the threat of resurgent inflation driven by energy prices, with Brent crude recently spiking over $100 per barrel for the first time in over a year. This has directly impacted the latest inflation flash estimates, which show a worrying uptick after a period of moderation throughout 2025. Consequently, we now anticipate the European Central Bank will pivot hawkishly and implement three consecutive rate hikes starting in June.

For traders, this means short-term interest rate markets are the most direct place to position for this shift. With the deposit rate expected to reach 2.75% by September, forward markets still appear to be underpricing the speed of this move. We should consider positioning through interest rate swaps or by selling futures contracts tied to EURIBOR to capitalize on rising short-term rates.

This environment of rising rates and geopolitical tension will increase market volatility, a scenario we have seen before. The VSTOXX index, a measure of European equity volatility, is already climbing, suggesting it is time to consider buying protection. Purchasing put options on major indices like the EURO STOXX 50 could hedge portfolios against the downside risk that monetary tightening presents.

The source of this uncertainty, the energy market itself, also presents opportunities through derivatives. The tensions disrupting the Strait of Hormuz, through which over 20% of the world’s oil transits, suggest that volatility in energy prices will remain high. Using options to construct spreads on crude oil futures can be a way to trade this turbulence while managing risk.

We only need to look back to the policy response in 2022 to understand how quickly the ECB can move when faced with an energy-driven inflation crisis. Back then, the bank rapidly took rates from negative territory to over 4% to fight record inflation following the shock from the war in Ukraine. This historical precedent adds credibility to the view that a swift, multi-step series of hikes is now a very real possibility.

Reuters reports a senior Iranian official says Tehran is considering joining further US peace talks, undecided

Reuters reported on Monday that a senior Iranian official said Iran is reviewing taking part in the next round of peace talks with the United States, but no final decision has been made. The official said the review is currently positive.

The official said Pakistan is making efforts aimed at ending what was described as a US blockade and supporting Iran’s participation in the talks. No timetable or further details were provided.

At the time of press, the US Dollar Index (DXY) was down 0.1% on the day at 98.12. The move came as market sentiment improved slightly following the report.

We’re seeing signs of easing tensions, which suggests market volatility may decrease in the coming weeks. The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), which we saw push above 22 last month during naval drills, has already dipped below 20 on this news. This environment could favor strategies that benefit from falling implied volatility, such as selling premium on index options.

We believe the biggest impact will be on crude oil markets, as any potential deal could ease sanctions and increase supply. Brent crude, which we saw spike to nearly $95 a barrel just last week on supply fears, is already trading back toward $90. We could see traders begin to price in a move toward the mid-$80s, making bearish positions on oil futures more attractive.

The U.S. dollar is losing some of its safe-haven appeal with this potential de-escalation. We’ve seen the Dollar Index (DXY) retreat from the highs around 104 it tested in late 2025, and this news is pushing it further down. This trend could benefit currencies of oil-importing nations and presents opportunities in FX options that favor dollar weakness against the Euro or Yen.

For equity indices like the S&P 500, this is a cautiously bullish signal. Lower energy prices reduce costs for many companies, especially in the transport and industrial sectors, which we’ve seen underperform recently. We may see an increase in demand for call options as traders position for a potential relief rally through May.

Amid UK political scrutiny and German producer prices, EUR/GBP holds near 0.8700, broadly unchanged

EUR/GBP trades near 0.8700 on Monday and is little changed, as support for the Euro and pressure on the Pound keep the pair in a tight range.

Sterling is under strain as political focus increases on UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer. He is due to speak in the House of Commons about vetting linked to the appointment of former UK ambassador to the US Peter Mandelson, after controversy over Mandelson’s past links to Jeffrey Epstein.

Market conditions are cautious as traders watch events in the Middle East. The US seized an Iranian cargo ship trying to cross the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran has suggested it may not attend talks on Tuesday while accusing the US of breaking a ceasefire.

The Euro is supported by German inflation data. Germany’s Producer Price Index rose 2.5% month-on-month in March, the strongest since August 2022, while it fell 0.2% year-on-year after a 3.3% drop in February.

In the UK, attention turns to data due this week. The labour market report for the three months to February is due Tuesday, then March CPI on Wednesday and Retail Sales on Friday, with the jobless rate forecast at 5.2%.

Looking back to 2025, the EUR/GBP cross was held in a tight range around 0.8700, but the landscape has since shifted. As of April 2026, the pair is trading nearer to 0.8450, reflecting a fundamental divergence in monetary policy that was only beginning to be hinted at last year. This ongoing divergence between a cautious European Central Bank (ECB) and a more hawkish Bank of England (BoE) should be the primary focus.

The political noise in the UK surrounding the Prime Minister’s appointments last year ultimately did not have a lasting impact on the pound. Instead, the market has refocused on hard data, which has consistently pointed to stubborn domestic inflation. UK core CPI has remained above 3% for the last six months, a stark contrast to the Eurozone where core inflation has recently fallen to 2.5%, giving the ECB more reason to consider rate cuts.

We recall the concerns in early 2025 about a spike in German Producer Prices, but that proved to be a temporary shock linked to energy costs. Since then, producer-level inflation in the Euro area has been subdued, removing a key pillar for ECB hawks. This reinforces the view that the ECB will likely cut interest rates at least once before the BoE even considers such a move.

The geopolitical tensions in the Middle East we saw flare up last year have become a persistent, low-level risk factor. While the specific US-Iran ship seizure incident was resolved, the continued instability in the region has kept a floor under oil prices. This creates a more significant inflationary headwind for the energy-import-dependent Eurozone than for the UK, further complicating the ECB’s policy path.

Given this context, derivative traders should consider that implied volatility in EUR/GBP may be too low, as it doesn’t fully price the risk of a sharp policy divergence later this year. We believe buying cheap, out-of-the-money puts on EUR/GBP with a six-to-nine-month expiry offers an attractive risk-reward profile. This strategy allows for participation in a further decline of the cross as the interest rate differential widens in favor of the pound.

Additionally, the forward markets are pricing in this anticipated divergence, with the EUR/GBP forward curve sloping downwards. For traders with a strong conviction, selling EUR/GBP forward contracts allows one to capture both the expected spot depreciation and the positive carry from being short the lower-yielding euro against the higher-yielding pound. Historically, in periods of clear and sustained policy divergence, these carry trades have performed well.

ING analysts say aluminium prices dipped on Hormuz assurances, then rebounded as closure fears renewed supply risks

LME aluminium prices fell by over 5.5% on Friday after Iran said it would keep the Strait of Hormuz open during a 10‑day ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah. The Strait had been closed since late February after US and Israeli strikes on Iran, and prices had reached a four‑year high last week amid supply disruption.

The Strait then closed again over the weekend, keeping focus on supply risk and transport disruption. The Middle East supplies about 9% of global aluminium output and is an important source for Europe.

Disruption is affecting production as well as shipping, and aluminium is now described as being in a structural deficit. If disruptions continue, upward price risk remains.

Problems at Emirates Global Aluminium’s Al Taweelah smelter, lower output at Alba, and earlier curtailments at Qatalum could remove nearly 3 mtpa of capacity. This is almost half of Middle East production and could widen the global supply deficit to 2Mt.

Smelters are hard to restart once shut, which may keep supply tight. Prices may stay supported even with short‑term swings.

Given the recent volatility, we should position for continued price strength in the aluminum market. The renewed closure of the Strait of Hormuz overrides any temporary optimism from the fragile ceasefire. This sharp reversal suggests the path of least resistance for prices is upward as supply fears dominate.

The market tightness is not just a story; it’s confirmed by data showing LME-registered aluminum inventories dropping below 450,000 tonnes this month, a level unseen in over 15 years. This physical scarcity helped push prices briefly to a four-year high last week, touching over $3,400 per tonne. These fundamentals support the view that recent price dips are buying opportunities.

For the coming weeks, we see value in buying call options to profit from potential price spikes. The geopolitical situation remains highly uncertain, and any further escalation could trigger a rapid move higher. This strategy allows us to capture significant upside while defining our maximum risk to the premium paid.

We should also consider using bull call spreads to reduce the entry cost, as implied volatility has increased. This approach benefits from rising prices but costs less than an outright call purchase, making it a more capital-efficient way to maintain a bullish stance. It is a prudent way to trade when options are expensive.

Looking back at the energy-driven production cuts we saw in Europe throughout 2025, it’s clear how sensitive the market is to supply disruptions. The current situation feels similar to the price shock following the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, which taught us that such deficits have a long tail. We believe the market is underestimating how difficult it is to restart idled smelter capacity once it goes offline.

The potential loss of nearly 3 million tonnes of annual production from key smelters like EGA and Alba is the core of the issue. This alone could widen the global supply deficit to 2 million tonnes. Such a significant shortfall will keep prices supported for the foreseeable future, even with short-term price swings.

MUFG’s Lee Hardman says Middle East tensions drove the US dollar higher, pushing DXY towards 98.500

The US dollar rose at the start of the week, pushing the Dollar Index (DXY) back towards its 200-day moving average near 98.500. This followed Friday’s low of 97.632, alongside a rise in Brent and pressure on high beta commodity currencies.

Renewed uncertainty over the US–Iran situation contributed to the move, after earlier expectations of de-escalation and the re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz weakened. Reports said the US navy fired upon and boarded an Iranian-flagged cargo ship in the Gulf of Oman, described as the first seizure since a US blockade of the Strait was introduced.

Other reports said Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) fired on multiple commercial vessels in the Strait. Iran was also reported to have reimposed “strict control” after briefly saying on Friday that it had re-opened the Strait.

These developments raised uncertainty over whether further talks would occur before a two-week ceasefire ends tomorrow. The article states it was created with the help of an AI tool and reviewed by an editor.

We remember last year in 2025 when a flare-up between the US and Iran sent the dollar higher, pushing the Dollar Index back towards its long-term average. This uncertainty in the Middle East dampened optimism and reminded us how quickly capital can flow to safety. The events surrounding the Strait of Hormuz served as a clear signal for how geopolitical risk drives the currency market.

Looking at today, April 20th, 2026, the DXY is hovering around 105.20, showing strength even without a major conflict. The CBOE Volatility Index, or VIX, has settled near 16, which is lower than the peaks seen during past tensions but still shows traders are on guard. We view this relative calm as an opportunity to prepare for potential surprises rather than a sign of lasting stability.

Given how quickly Brent crude prices reacted to naval actions in the Gulf of Oman last year, we should consider buying call options on oil futures. Current Brent prices are stable around $91 per barrel, making short-term call options a relatively inexpensive way to position for a sudden spike in risk. This offers a direct hedge against any disruption to the flow of oil through the Strait.

We should also look at currency pairs involving high-beta commodity currencies, which suffered during the 2025 scare. Considering put options on the Australian dollar (AUD) or New Zealand dollar (NZD) against the US dollar could be a prudent move. This strategy provides a hedge that would perform well if we see a similar flight to the safety of the dollar in the coming weeks.

Oil-fuelled Yen softness from Hormuz tensions leaves sterling pressing near peaks, maintaining bullish control

GBP/JPY rose on Monday, ending a two-day decline, as tensions in the Strait of Hormuz kept Oil prices high and weighed on the Yen due to Japan’s reliance on imported energy. The pair traded near 214.78, after reaching 215.91 last week, its highest level since July 2008.

Over the weekend, a brief reopening of the Strait of Hormuz was reversed and Iran reasserted control of the route. Iran cited a US naval blockade of its ports as a breach of ceasefire terms, while the US Navy intercepted and boarded an Iranian cargo vessel in the Gulf of Oman.

Higher Oil prices added to inflation risks and complicated central bank planning. This may delay Bank of England rate cuts, while in Japan higher import costs could slow the pace of Bank of Japan policy normalisation.

Reuters reported on Monday, citing five sources, that the BoJ is likely to hold off on raising interest rates at its upcoming meeting. The report linked this to reduced prospects of a near-term resolution to the Middle East conflict.

This week, focus turns to UK labour market data, inflation figures, and Retail Sales, plus Japan’s National CPI. On charts, GBP/JPY is above the 21-day SMA at 212.98 and the 100-day SMA at 211.21, with RSI at 60.82 and ADX at 18.90.

The growing difference in policy between the UK and Japan, made worse by high oil prices, suggests the pound will continue to strengthen against the yen. With Brent crude recently hitting a 20-month high over $115 a barrel, Japan’s reliance on importing over 99% of its oil is putting sustained pressure on its currency. This environment makes bullish derivative positions on GBP/JPY increasingly compelling.

We believe the Bank of England will be forced to delay interest rate cuts, providing support for the pound. UK inflation has remained persistent, with the latest figures from March 2026 showing the Consumer Price Index at 3.5%, well above the 2% target. Consequently, we should structure trades that profit from the BoE keeping its policy tight through the upcoming summer months.

In contrast, the Bank of Japan appears cautious about raising rates too quickly. We remember that the BoJ only moved away from negative interest rates about two years ago, in March 2024, and the high cost of energy imports now threatens to slow down the nation’s economic growth. This hesitation is a key factor that we expect will keep the yen weak.

Given this outlook, we see an opportunity in buying call options on GBP/JPY with expirations in the next four to six weeks. A break above the recent peak of 215.91 could attract more buyers, making it sensible to target a move toward the 218.00 level. We can use the support near the 21-day average around 213.00 as a critical level to reassess our positions.

However, we must watch this week’s key economic data, as it is the primary risk to this strategy. A surprise drop in UK inflation or a weaker jobs report could quickly undermine the pound. Likewise, an unexpectedly strong Japanese inflation number could pressure the Bank of Japan to act more decisively, strengthening the yen.

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