GBP/USD What’s changed in the last 24–48h

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GBP/USD What’s changed in the last 24–48hBritish Pound/US DollarSAXO:GBPUSDMark_Vader_Lab What’s changed in the last 24–48h IMF & BoE warnings: The IMF’s October Global Financial Stability Report flags stretched equity valuations—especially the AI-led tech cohort—and rising odds of a disorderly correction. The BoE has voiced a similar risk: if optimism about AI fades, markets could lurch lower. That mix has supported the USD via risk-off flows. UK data softens: Fresh ONS labour data show unemployment up to 4.8% (3m to August) and wage growth cooling—nudging markets to price earlier BoE easing at the margin and weighing on GBP. Price action: Into today, GBP/USD has remained heavy, trading around the low-1.33s and briefly probing the 1.33–1.325 support area cited by several desks. Sellers faded bounces below ~1.336/1.340 resistance. Counterweight from the Fed: A softer USD blip followed coverage of Powell hinting at scope to cut and slow QT, but it hasn’t flipped the broader risk tone yet. How the IMF “AI bubble” angle feeds through to GBP/USD Risk sentiment channel: AI-froth concerns raise correction risk in U.S. megacap tech. When equities wobble, USD tends to catch a haven bid, pushing GBP/USD lower—that’s what we’re seeing. Rates/term-premium channel: The IMF also highlights fiscal and bond-market vulnerabilities. Any jump in U.S. yields on risk stress can be USD-supportive unless the Fed leans clearly dovish. Relative growth narrative: The IMF’s WEO/GFSR portray the U.S. as still relatively resilient (AI investment) while the UK grows ~1.3% and faces stickier inflation—tilting differentials toward the USD unless UK data surprise. Levels & Bias (tactical) Resistance: 1.336–1.340 (break/close above would ease pressure); then 1.348. Support: 1.330/1.325 first; loss of 1.325 risks a run toward the low-1.32s. Bias: Still mildly bearish while below ~1.340 given risk-off impulse + soft UK labour prints. A durable USD dip would need clearer Fed easing signals or stronger UK data. Near-term catalysts to watch (this week) UK August GDP/production (Thu 16 Oct): A miss likely reinforces GBP selling; an upside surprise could spark a squeeze toward 1.34–1.348. U.S. data/Fed speak: Any firm dovish steer could cap the dollar and stabilise cable; renewed equity stress on AI-bubble headlines would do the opposite. Bottom line Including the IMF’s AI-bubble warnings, the story so far is risk-off supportive of the USD, UK data are not helping sterling, and GBP/USD remains under pressure while sub-1.340. For hedging: favour sell-the-rally flow below 1.340 with eyes on 1.330/1.325 support; flip more neutral only on a daily close above 1.340 or if UK data positively surprise.