Citi reports that EUR/GBP is once again flirting with the bottom of its trading range around 0.86, a move the bank finds at odds with the set of indicators that had pointed to a stronger euro against the pound. The financial group points to overseas demand for U.K. government bonds - gilts - as the force underpinning sterling and keeping EUR/GBP lower than fundamentals alone would imply.
Prior to the recent gilt buying, Citi had maintained a bullish bias on EUR/GBP based on recent data and indicators. That view has been tempered as the bank assesses whether the external purchases of gilts reflect a sustained shift in positioning or were instead opportunistic responses to a period in which Bank of England rate expectations pushed markedly hawkish and subsequently eased.
Citi emphasises that the persistence of gilt buying is a central question for the pound. If overseas demand for gilts continues, it could maintain downward pressure on EUR/GBP. If it was a temporary reaction to pricing dynamics around the Bank of England, the driver for the pound's strength may fade and allow fundamentals to reassert themselves.
The bank also flags that the upcoming Bank of England policy meeting is only one element influencing the currency pair. U.K. economic data releases and a scheduled by-election this week are additional near-term inputs that Citi says will matter for the next directional move in EUR/GBP. In Citi's assessment, flows into gilts and the underlying fundamentals for the two economies are currently sending conflicting signals.
Given these mixed messages, Citi says its conviction in a clear directional bias for EUR/GBP has weakened. The bank points out that the current environment of relatively low volatility makes options strategies that profit from limited price movement - specifically straddles and strangles - relatively attractive to market participants.
In short, Citi frames the current EUR/GBP dynamic as one where market flows - notably foreign gilt purchases - and economic fundamentals are diverging, leaving the pair's near-term path dependent on whether those flows persist and on forthcoming policy and data events in the U.K.