OANDA:GBPJPY   British Pound / Japanese Yen
BRITISH POUND OUTLOOK:
Hopes for a ceasefire in Ukraine have provoked a dramatic reversal in assets that were beaten down over the past two weeks.
GBP/JPY and GBP/USD rates have traded sharply higher over the past 24-hours, while EUR/GBP rates have reached channel resistance.
Recent changes in retail trader positioning suggest a bearish bias for GBP/JPY and GBP/USD rates, with a bullish bias for EUR/GBP rates.

The British economy is less impacted than the European Union over the threat of decoupling from Russia, insofar as the UK only gets 3% of its natural gas from Russia (compared to 45% for the EU). But as a European currency, the British Pound has been sucked into the maelstrom nevertheless, even though the UK’s sanction efforts towards Russia have been paltry at best.

The past 24-hours are offering a glimmer of hope for a resolution to the Russian invasion of Ukraine – even if doubts remain about the viability of recent negotiations. Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has indicated that he’s willing to discuss a diplomatic solution after abandoning any pretense of joining NATO, suggesting that Ukraine is willing to come to terms with Russia’s demands for a “security guarantee.”

The mere prospect of an offramp from the current crisis has stoked a much-needed relief rally across markets. The battered European currencies are faring well, with safe havens like the Japanese Yen and US Dollar pulling back. While not anywhere near ground zero in financial markets in terms of impact, the net-result of improving risk appetite has proved beneficial for the British Pound (but more so for the Euro).

Similarly, GBP/JPY rates have reversed sharply higher and are on the verge of achieving a significant technical hurdle: returning back above the ascending trendline from the March 2020 and December 2021 lows. In doing so, it would return back into the symmetrical triangle that began to form in October 2021; a false bearish breakout would have transpired. Moreover, the pair never made its way below the descending trendline from the July 2007 (all-time high) and August 2015 highs, giving credence to a more significant rally henceforth. A return back to the daily 21-EMA, for which GBP/JPY rates have closed below every session since February 23, seems plausible in the near-term.

GBP/JPY: Retail trader data shows 49.32% of traders are net-long with the ratio of traders short to long at 1.03 to 1. The number of traders net-long is 13.39% higher than yesterday and 40.49% higher from last week, while the number of traders net-short is 11.90% lower than yesterday and 25.44% lower from last week.

We typically take a contrarian view to crowd sentiment, and the fact traders are net-short suggests GBP/JPY prices may continue to rise.

Yet traders are less net-short than yesterday and compared with last week. Recent changes in sentiment warn that the current GBP/JPY price trend may soon reverse lower despite the fact traders remain net-short.

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