Home GBP/USD: Trading the British Retail Sales Jun 2015
Opinions

GBP/USD: Trading the British Retail Sales Jun 2015

British  Retail Sales is considered one of the most important economic indicators. A reading that is higher than the market forecast is bullish for the British pound.

Update:  UK Retail Sales +0.2% – GBP/USD extends gains

Here are all the details, and 5 possible outcomes for GBP/USD.

Published on Thursday at 8:30 GMT.

 Indicator Background

Retail  Sales  is  the primary gauge  of consumer spending, a critical component of economic growth.  An unexpected reading can have a major impact on the movement of GBP/USD.

Retail Sales  bounced back in April with a strong gain of 1.2%, crushing the estimate of 0.4%.  However, the good news is not expected to extend to the May report, with the estimate standing at a flat 0.0%. Will the indicator repeat and beat the upcoming estimate?

Sentiments and levels

The US  dollar has run into some turbulence, with the British pound taking full advantage and racking up impressive gains. However, the FOMC statement could lead to a correction, with the Fed expected to raise rates in September. Inflation remains very low in the UK, and if this week’s inflation numbers are poor, the pound could lose some of its recent luster. So, the overall sentiment is  bearish on GBP/USD towards this release.

Technical levels, from top to bottom: 1.5746, 1.5682, 1.5590, 1.5485, 1.5350 and 1.5270.

5 Scenarios

  1. Within expectations: -0.3% to +0.6%: In such a case, the  pound is likely to rise within range, with a small chance of breaking higher.
  2. Above expectations: +0.7% to +1.1%: An unexpected higher reading can send GBP/USD above one resistance line.
  3. Well above expectations: Above +1.1%: Such an outcome would likely propel the pair upwards, and a second resistance line might be broken as a result.
  4. Below expectations: -0.8% to -0.4%: A weak reading could push GBP/USD below one level of support.
  5. Well below expectations: Below -0.8%:  A sharp contraction  by the indicator  could push the pair lower and  break  a second  support level.

To follow this event live:   [do action=”calendar-event” eventid=”9f9b4613-21ff-4cb7-8170-d3f59d2b2fe2″/]

Kenny Fisher

Kenny Fisher

Kenny Fisher - Senior Writer A native of Toronto, Canada, Kenneth worked for seven years in the marketing and trading departments at Bendix, a foreign exchange company in Toronto. Kenneth is also a lawyer, and has extensive experience as an editor and writer.