The British pound has stabilized on Friday after four straight losing sessions. In the European session, GBP is trading at 1.2666, up 0.02%. It has been a miserable week for the pound, which is down 1.9%. The pound fell as low as 1.2629 on Thursday, its lowest level since early July.
The UK economy surprised on the downside with a contraction of 0.1% m/m in September, after a 0.2% gain in August and below the market estimate of 0.2%. This was the first decline in five months. Quarterly, the economy expanded by only 0.1% in the third quarter, its weakest pace in three quarters. This followed the 0.5% gain in Q2 and missed the market estimate of 0.2%. The services sector grew by just 0.1%.
The GDP data will be a major disappointment to the new Starmer government, which has promised to kick-start the UK economy. After solid growth in the first half of the year, the economy fell with a sharp thud, with weak consumer and business confidence dampening economic activity.
The Bank of England will be keeping a close eye on the GDP data, with its next meeting on Dec. 19, the last meeting of the year. The BoE shaved rates by a quarter-point earlier this month and weak GDP will support the case for a rate cut at the December meeting.
The US closes the trading week with retail sales, which are expected to have improved in October. The market estimate is 1.9%, compared to 1.7% in September. Consumer spending has been generally strong and consumer confidence should improve now that the uncertainty over the US election is over.