British Pound (GBP)

United Kingdom — Bank of England

Pound sterling — one of the oldest continuously circulating currencies in the world.

FX Session:
London
GBP/USD
1.35483
GBP/USD Exchange Rate
Economic Indicators
Indicator Latest Previous Change Date
Policy Rate 4.25 4.0 +0.25 2025-05-08
Inflation 4.0 4.1 -0.10 2025-05-31
Core Inflation 4.4 4.5 -0.10 2025-05-31
Gdp 704.798 705.187 -0.39 2025-06-30
Unemployment 4.7 4.7 0.00 2025-05-31
Trade Balance -10989.0 -5835.0 -5154.00 2025-06-30
Retail Sales 0.0 0.4 -0.40 2025-05-31
Ppi 1.43 1.43 0.00 2025-05-31
Bank of England Press Releases
CFTC Commitment of Traders — GBP

About the British Pound (GBP)

The British pound sterling (GBP) is the official currency of the United Kingdom and one of the oldest continuously circulating currencies in the world, with roots tracing back to Anglo-Saxon England. It ranks as the fourth-most-traded currency in global FX markets, appearing in roughly 13% of all daily transactions, and holds third place among global reserve currencies. GBP/USD — known in the market as 'cable' — and EUR/GBP are the two benchmark sterling pairs, while sterling also trades actively against the Japanese yen, Australian dollar, Canadian dollar, and Swiss franc. London's position as the world's largest FX trading hub gives sterling exceptional market depth and liquidity, particularly during the European session. The UK's open capital account and large financial services sector mean GBP is sensitive to global risk sentiment as well as domestic macro data.

Bank of England: monetary policy framework

The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) sets Bank Rate — the benchmark interest rate that anchors borrowing costs, mortgage rates, and savings returns across the UK economy — at eight scheduled meetings per year. The MPC has nine voting members: five Bank insiders (the Governor and four Deputy Governors) and four external economists appointed by HM Treasury, and their individual votes are published simultaneously with the rate decision. The Bank's primary statutory objective is to maintain 2% CPI inflation, as defined by a remit letter from HM Treasury; a secondary objective of supporting economic growth and employment applies when consistent with the price stability goal. Four times a year — in February, May, August, and November — the MPC meeting is accompanied by a full Monetary Policy Report containing fan-chart forecasts for inflation, GDP, and unemployment, plus a press conference by the Governor that markets treat as a major rate-guidance event. When conventional rate policy reaches its limits the Bank can deploy quantitative easing (QE) or quantitative tightening (QT) through its Asset Purchase Facility, buying or selling UK gilts and corporate bonds to influence longer-term yields and financial conditions.

What moves the GBP?

  • Bank of England Bank Rate decisions and MPC vote splits — a hawkish majority (more votes for hikes than cuts) typically supports sterling; a dovish tilt weighs on it.
  • UK CPI and services CPI — services inflation is the stickiest domestic price component and the one the MPC monitors most closely when gauging whether underlying price pressures are cooling.
  • UK wage growth (ONS Average Earnings) — strong earnings raise the risk of second-round inflation, typically supporting a tighter Bank Rate path and a firmer pound.
  • Gilt yields and spreads — 10-year gilt yields relative to German Bunds and US Treasuries are a real-time signal of the rate differential that anchors GBP/USD and EUR/GBP direction.
  • UK labour-market data: payrolled employees, unemployment rate, claimant count, and ONS earnings — together the most comprehensive monthly picture of labour-market slack and cost pressures.
  • UK GDP — monthly GDP surprises and quarterly growth rates shape expectations for the Bank Rate path and the broader UK growth narrative.
  • UK PMIs (S&P Global / CIPS) — the composite PMI above 50 signals expansion and supports sterling; sharp falls below 50 signal recession risk and can accelerate rate-cut pricing.
  • UK current account — the UK runs a structural current account deficit, relying on foreign capital inflows; episodes of reduced overseas appetite for UK assets can pressure sterling regardless of domestic rates.
  • Fiscal and political credibility — gilt-market confidence in UK fiscal policy is a key sterling anchor; credibility shocks can trigger simultaneous gilt sell-offs and sterling weakness.
  • Risk sentiment — GBP behaves as a partial risk-on currency, tending to weaken in global risk-off episodes and strengthen when risk appetite improves, in part because of London's central role in global financial intermediation.

Key data and events to watch

  • Bank of England Bank Rate decision and MPC vote split (eight times per year), with the Monetary Policy Report press conference in February, May, August, and November.
  • UK CPI and core CPI (ONS, released monthly) — the headline inflation series the MPC is mandated to target.
  • ONS Labour Market Statistics (monthly) — payrolled employees, unemployment rate, claimant count, and average weekly earnings including and excluding bonuses.
  • UK GDP monthly estimate (ONS) and quarterly GDP flash and final releases — track both levels and revisions.
  • S&P Global / CIPS UK Composite PMI (flash and final, monthly) — the earliest monthly growth indicator, closely watched for recession or rebound signals.
  • UK Retail Sales (ONS, monthly) — a key consumption proxy and input into demand-pull inflation assessments.
  • Debt Management Office (DMO) gilt issuance calendar and gilt auction results — large supply can cheapen gilts and widen spreads, indirectly pressuring sterling.
  • Bank of England Governor and MPC member speeches — off-cycle guidance can materially reprice rate expectations between scheduled decisions.

Frequently asked questions about the British Pound

What is the difference between GBP, sterling and the pound?
GBP is the ISO 4217 currency code used in trading systems and settlement. 'Pound sterling' is the full official name of the currency. 'Pound' or the £ symbol is the everyday term used in the UK. All three refer to exactly the same currency issued by the Bank of England.
How often does the Bank of England change interest rates?
The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee holds eight scheduled meetings per year, roughly every six weeks. Bank Rate can be held, raised, or cut at any meeting based on the inflation outlook, labour-market tightness, and economic growth. The decision and the nine members' individual votes are published simultaneously at 12:00 GMT on the decision day.
What does 'cable' mean in FX?
'Cable' is the FX market's nickname for the GBP/USD currency pair. The term dates to the mid-19th century, when sterling-dollar exchange rates were transmitted between London and New York via a transatlantic telegraph cable laid under the Atlantic Ocean. Today it remains the standard shorthand for GBP/USD among traders and on trading desks globally.
Is the pound sterling a safe haven currency?
No — sterling is generally not considered a safe haven. Unlike the Swiss franc, Japanese yen, or US dollar, GBP tends to weaken during global risk-off episodes because the UK runs a structural current account deficit and relies on steady foreign capital inflows. When global risk appetite deteriorates, those inflows slow and sterling comes under pressure. GBP is better characterised as a partial risk-on currency: it tends to outperform in calm, carry-friendly environments and underperform in episodes of acute financial stress.
Why does UK wage growth matter for the GBP exchange rate?
UK wage growth is one of the most closely watched variables by the Bank of England because it feeds directly into services inflation — the stickiest component of the UK consumer price basket. When earnings rise faster than productivity, businesses pass higher labour costs into prices, making it harder for CPI to return to the 2% target. This tends to keep Bank Rate higher for longer, which supports gilt yields and, in turn, sterling. Conversely, a sharp cooling in wage growth signals easing domestic price pressures and typically brings forward rate-cut expectations, weighing on GBP.
What is a Bank of England Monetary Policy Report?
The Monetary Policy Report (MPR), published four times a year in February, May, August, and November, is the Bank of England's main communication on its economic outlook. It sets out the MPC's central projections — shown as fan charts — for CPI inflation, GDP growth, and unemployment over a two-to-three-year horizon, conditioned on market-implied interest rates. The Governor presents the report at a press conference, making MPR meetings the highest-impact events in the Bank's calendar for sterling traders.
How does the UK current account deficit affect sterling?
The UK consistently runs one of the largest current account deficits among G10 economies, meaning it imports more goods, services, and investment income than it exports. To finance this deficit the UK must attract an equivalent flow of foreign capital — through foreign direct investment, portfolio inflows into gilts and equities, and banking flows. When global risk appetite is high, these flows are ample and sterling is well supported. When global uncertainty rises or the UK's fiscal or political outlook deteriorates, foreign investors reduce their UK allocations, reducing demand for sterling and pushing it lower. This structural funding dependency makes GBP more vulnerable than lower-deficit currencies to sudden shifts in global sentiment.
What are gilts and why do they matter for GBP?
Gilts are UK government bonds issued by HM Treasury and managed through the Debt Management Office (DMO). They are the risk-free benchmark for UK interest rates and a key component of global fixed-income portfolios. Gilt yields matter for sterling for two reasons: first, higher gilt yields relative to Bunds or US Treasuries attract foreign capital into UK assets, supporting GBP; second, disorderly gilt sell-offs — driven by fiscal credibility concerns or forced deleveraging — can rapidly weaken sterling as investors reduce UK exposure. The Bank of England monitors gilt-market functioning and can intervene via emergency asset purchases when market dysfunction threatens financial stability.