Pound strengthens slightly against dollar despite geopolitical tensions

Pound strengthens slightly against dollar despite geopolitical tensions
Rivanshi Rakhrai
10 Jun 2026, 09:08 AM

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GBP/USD long

Buy GBP/USD around 1.3390. The article flags a shift toward higher Bank of England rates (25 bps increase expected before year-end), which supports sterling versus a dollar that’s waiting on CPI to decide Fed tightening. If UK rates are repriced higher while the Fed is still data-dependent, GBP should hold up better than risk sentiment implies.

Key Risk: US CPI comes in hot enough to force a clear Fed-tightening repricing, sending GBP/USD sharply lower.

USD/JPY short

Sell USD/JPY. Second-order: if US CPI is strong, the dollar strengthens broadly, but the yen often benefits from “risk-off” and rate-spread dynamics. With Middle East tensions already elevated, a stronger USD may not translate into sustained USD/JPY strength; instead, yen demand can rise as hedging and safe-haven flows kick in.

Key Risk: Markets treat the CPI-driven dollar strength as the dominant driver and ignore risk-off, pushing USD/JPY higher anyway.

  • GBP/USD trades higher near 1.3390 before key US data.
  • Markets await US inflation figures for interest rate clues.
  • Middle East tensions and UK outlook remain in focus.

The GBP/USD currency pair traded in positive territory around 1.3390 during the early European session on Wednesday as investors positioned themselves ahead of key economic data releases from the United States and the United Kingdom.

Market sentiment remained cautious, with traders awaiting the release of the US Consumer Price Index inflation report for May later in the day.

The inflation data is expected to provide fresh insights into the future direction of US monetary policy and could influence movements in the US Dollar.

Focus on interest rate expectations

Expectations surrounding interest rates have undergone a notable shift in recent months.

Financial markets had previously anticipated that the Bank of England would lower interest rates twice this year, bringing the benchmark rate down to 3.25%.

Market projections now indicate a 25-basis-point increase in interest rates before the end of the year.

The change in expectations has provided some support to the British Pound.

Nevertheless, analysts suggest that gains in the currency could remain limited as escalating geopolitical tensions continue to weigh on investor sentiment and risk-sensitive assets.

Middle East tensions add to market uncertainty

Geopolitical developments remained a key factor influencing financial markets.

Iranian Foreign Minister warned on Wednesday that neighbouring Gulf countries have a legal and moral responsibility to prevent American and Israeli strikes.

The remarks followed military developments in the region after the United States launched retaliatory strikes against Iran on Tuesday.

Washington described the action as a proportional response to the downing of a US helicopter gunship near the Strait of Hormuz a day earlier.

The renewed tensions have added another layer of uncertainty to global markets, prompting investors to monitor developments in the region alongside economic indicators closely.

US inflation report takes centre stage

Market participants are expected to focus heavily on the upcoming US CPI inflation report, which could shape expectations for the Federal Reserve's next policy moves.

Investors will be looking for signals on whether inflationary pressures remain persistent.

A stronger-than-expected inflation reading could prompt traders to increase bets on tighter monetary policy from the Federal Reserve.

Such an outcome would likely strengthen the US Dollar against major currencies, including the British Pound, as higher interest rate expectations generally boost demand for the greenback.

Conversely, softer inflation figures could ease concerns about further policy tightening and potentially limit support for the US currency.

UK GDP data also on radar

Beyond the US inflation figures, traders are also preparing for the release of the United Kingdom's monthly Gross Domestic Product data scheduled for Friday.

The growth report is expected to offer further insight into the health of the UK economy and could influence expectations regarding future Bank of England policy decisions.

Until then, currency markets are likely to remain driven by incoming economic data and geopolitical developments, with GBP/USD holding modest gains as investors assess the balance between monetary policy expectations and global risk sentiment.