Sterling / Dollar (GBP/USD) — Weekend Daily Read
Framework Bias
LONG BIAS (GBP/USD)
Cable closed Friday at 1.3433, essentially flat on the day after testing both 1.3459 on the upside and 1.3415 on the downside. The pair is consolidating at the top of a multi-week range rather than breaking down from it. That is a bullish characteristic. When a currency pair trades sideways near its highs after a sustained rally, the default lean is for continuation rather than reversal.
Sterling has been one of the stronger G10 currencies in recent weeks. The UK economic data has surprised to the upside on growth and the Bank of England has maintained a cautious stance on rate cuts. Both factors are supportive for GBP. The US dollar, by contrast, has weakened as the DXY dropped from above 104 earlier in the year to 99.32. That structural dollar weakness is the dominant driver of cable’s rally.
The 1.35 level is the big psychological target that the market will be watching. If cable can sustain above 1.3420 on Monday’s thin trading and clear 1.3459 on Tuesday’s London open, the 1.35 and then 1.36 levels come into play. The framework leans long but the double-holiday liquidity gap demands careful position sizing.
Key Levels
| Level Type | Price | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Major Resistance | 1.3600 | Multi-year high zone and key upside target |
| Near Resistance | 1.3500 | Psychological round number |
| Near Resistance | 1.3459 | Friday intraday high |
| Current Price | 1.3433 | Friday close |
| Near Support | 1.3415 | Friday intraday low and near-term demand |
| Key Support | 1.3350 | Prior consolidation and weekly demand |
| Major Support | 1.3200 | Monthly demand and prior breakout |
Trade Framework
| Scenario | Entry Zone | Stop | Target | R:R |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Long on Tuesday London open dip | 1.3415 to 1.3430 | 1.3360 | 1.3500 | approx 1.9:1 |
| Long on 1.3460 break and hold | 1.3465 | 1.3410 | 1.3550 | approx 1.6:1 |
| Short on support failure | 1.3350 break | 1.3400 | 1.3200 | approx 3.0:1 |
Confidence level: around 61%. The structural case for cable higher is intact. The 61% reflects the near-term consolidation and double-holiday liquidity risk. Tuesday’s London open, the first proper two-way liquidity event, will be the real test.
Weekend Context
Cable is trading at its highest levels since 2022, driven by a combination of dollar weakness and sterling resilience. The UK-US trade deal discussions that progressed in the first half of 2026 provided an additional sterling positive, reducing the Brexit-discount that cable had carried for years.
The Bank of England’s next meeting is the key near-term calendar event. Any forward guidance that suggests fewer rate cuts than the market expects would be a near-term GBP positive. Conversely, data showing UK growth softening sharply would give the BoE more reason to cut, which could weigh on sterling.
For the weekend specifically: thin Monday FX liquidity can produce spiky moves in both directions that are not representative of the underlying trend. Do not be shaken out of a well-considered position by a Monday blip in low-volume conditions. Wait for Tuesday’s London open to assess the real picture.