Headline U.K. inflation accelerated from 3.4% year-on-year to 3.6% in June while the annual core CPI climbed from 3.5% to 3.7% instead of holding steady as expected.
How did our watchlist setups for this top-tier catalyst fare?
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The Setup
Event Outcome:
The UK’s consumer price inflation accelerated to 3.6% year-on-year in June, up from 3.4% in May, marking the highest reading since January 2024 and potentially dampening expectations for aggressive Bank of England rate cuts in the near term.
Key Points from the June CPI Report
- Headline CPI rose to 3.6% annually, above the 3.4% consensus forecast, with monthly inflation climbing 0.3% versus 0.1% in June 2024
- Core CPI (excluding energy, food, alcohol, and tobacco) increased to 3.7% from 3.5% in May, signaling persistent underlying price pressures
- CPIH (including owner occupiers’ housing costs) climbed to 4.1% from 4.0%, remaining well above the Bank of England’s 2% target
- Transport costs, particularly motor fuels, provided the largest upward contribution to the monthly change, while housing and household services offered some offset
- Services inflation held steady at 4.7%, while goods inflation accelerated from 2.0% to 2.4%, marking the highest goods inflation since October 2023
- Food and non-alcoholic beverages inflation edged up to 4.5% from 4.4%, continuing a third consecutive monthly increase
Fundamental Bias Triggered: Bullish GBP Setups
This week’s market drama probably had traders reaching for their stress balls more than usual. It started with Trump’s weekend bombshell – threatening 30% tariffs on EU and Mexico by August 1st. Markets initially freaked out, then shrugged it off as “just another negotiating tactic.”
Tuesday’s US CPI hit exactly as expected at 2.7%, but the devil was in the details. Furniture and appliance prices spiked, likely signaling tariffs are finally biting consumers. This probably spooked bond markets more than equities, with the 10-year yield jumping to month-high levels.
Wednesday brought the week’s most bizarre subplot – anonymous reports that Trump was ready to fire Fed Chair Powell. The dollar and bonds went haywire before Trump quickly dismissed it as “highly unlikely.” Classic Washington drama that reminded everyone why Fed independence matters.
Thursday’s data dump was where fundamentals finally won. US retail sales crushed expectations (+0.6% vs +0.2% forecast) and jobless claims plummeted to 221k – way below the 234k estimate. This probably reinforced the “American consumer is built different” narrative keeping recession fears at bay.
Friday capped things off with Fed Governor Waller going full dove, calling for a 25bp July cut. The dollar took a beating, falling nearly 1% before recovering.
EUR/GBP Net Bullish GBP Event outcome + Risk-OFF Scenario = Arguably best odds of a net positive outcome

EUR/GBP 1-hour Forex Chart by TradingView
In our watchlist, we spotted EUR/GBP approaching R1 (.8690) near the .8700 major psychological mark while forming a bearish divergence, suggesting that ceiling could hold in case the U.K. CPI report comes in stronger than expected. Our thesis was based on lower U.K. tariffs exposure versus uncertainty surrounding US-EU trade negotiations.
Although the pair already retreated from the resistance zone ahead of the inflation release while Uncle Sam’s own inflation figures ushered in a bit of risk aversion, price managed a brief pullback then resumed its bearish move when the U.K. numbers were printed, dipping to the .8650 minor psychological mark.
Rumors of Trump getting ready to fire Powell caused currency markets to whipsaw later in the day, leading EUR/GBP to spike back to the .8700 area midweek before downside pressure picked up again, even after the U.K. jobs report fell short of estimates the next day.
Increasing doubts about the EU and the U.S. reaching a trade agreement anytime soon appeared to keep the shared currency on shaky ground, along with subdued final inflation readings for the region, eventually dragging EUR/GBP to the next support zone at the pivot point level (.8640).
Not Eligible to move beyond Watchlist – Bearish GBP Setups and GBP/USD long setup
GBP/USD: Bullish GBP Event outcome + Risk-On Scenario

GBP/USD 1-hour Forex Chart by TradingView
While the event supported a bearish setup on GBP/USD, broader market sentiment leading up to the actual U.K. CPI release didn’t quite align with a risk-on view. Investors were on edge while attempting to stay on top of Trump’s tariffs announcements, mixed Chinese data, and hotter than expected U.S. inflation.
As a result, there wasn’t enough bullish momentum to propel Cable up to the pullback areas we eyed close to the descending trend line even when U.K. CPI data came in stronger than expected. Instead, the pair already established fresh weekly lows around the 1.3400 support zone before making a feeble move higher when the numbers were printed.
Higher volatility stemming from market anxiety on Trump possibly firing Fed head Powell led to a much larger pullback to the 100 SMA dynamic resistance in the next trading session, before GBP/USD dipped then bounced off the 1.3400 handle again.
GBP/JPY Short: Net Bearish GBP Event outcome + Risk-Off Scenario

GBP/JPY 1-hour Forex Chart by TradingView
Guppy had been consolidating inside a descending triangle pattern ahead of the U.K. CPI release, potentially gearing up for a breakdown in case the actual results fall short of estimates. The pair already staged a bullish breakout even before the U.K. inflation report was printed, but the move was mainly driven by yen weakness on account of rising JGB yields from election jitters.
Stronger than expected U.K. inflation data didn’t quite trigger much of a bullish reaction from this pair, as safe-haven currencies like the yen held their ground while rumors of Trump possibly firing Powell circulated. GBP/JPY tumbled to the pivot point level (198.51) as risk-off flows picked up then rebounded when Trump downplayed the likelihood of sacking the Fed Chair.
GBP/AUD Short: Bearish GBP Event outcome + Risk-On Scenario

GBP/AUD 1-hour Forex Chart by TradingView
This sterling pair had already been working with sustained bearish pressure from the previous week, weighed by a dovish BOE MPC split and a surprise RBA decision to keep rates on hold instead of cutting.
GBP/AUD appeared to form a bearish flag at its long-term support level just above the 2.0500 major psychological mark, so our watchlist anticipated possible downtrend continuation if the U.K. CPI falls short of estimates.
While price dipped slightly below the short-term consolidation pattern on some signs of resilience in Chinese data during the Asian session, a surge in risk-off flows stemming from talks of Trump possibly firing Powell took the pair right back above the 2.0500 handle before the U.K. inflation report was released.
Stronger than expected U.K. inflation figures allowed the pair to sustain the rebound, climbing back above the 100 SMA dynamic inflection point and extending its rally past the 2.0600 handle when Australia’s jobs report fell short of estimates the next day. GBP/AUD carried on to test the 2.0700 resistance as the U.K. jobs release came in stronger than expected in the following session.
The Verdict
Our fundamental analysis and watch scenario based on a risk-off market environment and a net bullish GBP reaction leaned in favor of a short EUR/GBP setup.
Our technical analysis pinpointed the .8700 resistance zone near S1 as a potential area of interest for short entries ahead of the event, plus the pair possibly keeping its movements below this ceiling should the market mood continue to lean risk-off after the U.K. CPI release.
Although intraday swings in sentiment led to more elevated volatility than usual, EUR/GBP managed to keep its head below the .8700 ceiling highlighted in our watchlist and resume its selloff when the EU CPI final readings highlighted a contrast in inflation trends with the U.K.
Overall, we assess this as likely supportive of a net positive outcome since GBP was already enjoying some upside momentum leading up to the inflation release and managed to resume its advance versus EUR after market volatility settled.
Still, trade management and execution would have played a minor role, as whipsaws might have been challenging to navigate but would have also offered another opportunity to enter at the .8700 resistance before EUR/GBP bearish momentum picked up.
Key Takeaways: When Favorable Fundie Data Doesn’t Guarantee Strong Positive Outcomes
The UK inflation surprise perfectly illustrates a crucial trading reality: even when economic data strongly supports your directional bias, market reactions can be disappointingly muted or completely contrary to expectations. Despite UK CPI accelerating to 3.6% (vs 3.4% forecast) and core inflation jumping to 3.7% – clear bullish signals for GBP – the pound’s reaction was surprisingly subdued and we should have gotten a much more favorable reaction in EUR/GBP.
Why? Because markets rarely trade in isolation. During this week, competing narratives dominated: Trump’s tariff threats, Fed Chair firing rumors, and broader risk sentiment shifts overshadowed what should have been a straightforward bullish catalyst for sterling. The GBP/USD setup, which technically aligned perfectly with a bullish scenario, struggled to gain meaningful traction despite the inflation beat.
This disconnect between data and price action happens more often than traders realize. You can nail the fundamental call, position yourself at ideal technical levels, and still watch the market shrug off your “perfect” setup. External factors – whether geopolitical drama, cross-asset correlations, or simple market exhaustion – frequently hijack expected reactions.
This is precisely why rigid position sizing and predetermined exit strategies matter more than being “right” about the data. When markets ignore strong fundamentals, traders without proper risk management often double down on losing positions, convinced the market will “come to its senses.”
The lesson? Trade what the market gives you, not what the data suggests it should give you. Your stop loss doesn’t care about your fundamental thesis.
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