Pound Set for 2% Monthly Gain
2026-01-30 11:05
By
Joana Ferreira
1 min. read
Sterling settled around $1.38 at the end of January, close to a four-year high and recording a 2% gain over the month, fueled by US dollar weakness following the Federal Reserve’s decision to keep rates unchanged and President Donald Trump’s signals that the administration is comfortable with a weaker greenback.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell highlighted a “clear improvement” in the US economic outlook and signs of a stabilizing labor market, but the comments did little to lift the soft dollar, which remained under pressure from ongoing policy uncertainty, including renewed tariff threats and criticism of the Fed’s independence, and government shutdown risks.
In the UK, fresh BRC data indicated accelerating price pressures, reinforcing concerns over sticky inflation and potentially limiting the Bank of England’s scope to cut interest rates in the near term.
Meanwhile, the Bank of England’s monetary indicators revealed lower-than-expected mortgage approvals and consumer credit for December.