EUR/GBP was seen oscillating in a range below 200-day SMA through the mid-European session
The British pound was further undermined by a softer UK GDP print, showing that the economy expanded by 1.3% during the July-September period. This marked a sharp deceleration from the 5.5% growth reported in the previous quarter and was worse than 1.5% anticipated. Adding to this, the UK Manufacturing and Industrial production figures also fell short of consensus estimates.
On the other hand, the shared currency found some support after the European Central Bank (ECB) – in its latest economic bulletin – noted that inflation is lasting longer than originally expected. Adding the European Commission said that it expects inflation in the Eurozone to be 2.4% in 2021, 2.2% in 2022, and 1.4% in 2023, bringing the ECB rate hike expectations back on the table. The fundamental backdrop favors bullish traders, though a sustained breakthrough the 200-DMA barrier, around the 0.8575-80 region, is needed to confirm the positive bias. Moreover, relatively thin liquidity conditions, on the back of a bank holiday in the US and Canada, further warrants some caution before positioning for any further appreciating move.