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GBP/JPY

GBP/JPY

The GBP/JPY exchange rate staged a notable recovery on Friday, stabilizing around the **209.23** mark as a flurry of resilient British economic data clashed with cooling inflationary pressures in Japan. This 0.18% intraday ascent was primarily driven by a "double-beat" in UK domestic indicators, which effectively counteracted the bearish sentiment following earlier reports of rising unemployment. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) reported that UK retail sales surged by a staggering **1.8%** month-on-month in January—a figure that dwarfed the consensus forecast of 0.2% and signaled a robust recovery from December’s stagnant growth. On an annual basis, the volume of retail sales grew by **4.5%**, significantly outperforming the downwardly revised 1.9% previous reading. This consumer resilience was even more pronounced when stripping out volatile fuel sales, where core retail volumes grew by **5.5%** year-on-year, underscoring a broad-based appetite for discretionary spending despite the prevailing high-rate environment. Adding further fuel to the pounds rally was the preliminary February Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) data from S&P Global, which painted a picture of an economy gaining mid-quarter momentum. The UK Composite PMI climbed to a 22-month high of **53.9**, driven by a resurgence in the manufacturing sector—which hit an 18-month high of **52.0**—and a persistently expanding services sector at **53.9**. These "goldilocks" readings suggest that the UK may be on track for **0.3% GDP growth** in the first quarter of 2026, a prospect that has complicated the Bank of Englands (BoE) path toward monetary easing. While the market had previously priced in a high probability of a rate cut at the March 19 meeting, the strength of todays data suggests the BoE might adopt a more cautious "wait-and-see" approach, potentially deferring aggressive cuts until inflation—currently at **3.0%**—closer aligns with the **2.0%** target. In stark contrast, the Japanese Yen faced persistent downward pressure as January inflation data confirmed a sharp deceleration in price growth. Japans national CPI fell to **1.5%** year-on-year, down from 2.1% in December, marking its slowest pace since early 2022. More critically for the Bank of Japan (BoJ), the "core-core" index—which excludes both fresh food and energy—slid to **2.6%**, while core inflation (excluding fresh food) matched market expectations by cooling to **2.0%**. This retreat toward the BoJ’s target level has significantly dampened speculation of a rapid series of interest rate hikes. While the BoJ successfully normalized its policy throughout late 2025, the recent cooling of cost-push pressures suggests that further tightening may be delayed until at least June. This widening "growth-inflation" gap between London and Tokyo has kept the GBP/JPY pair confined within its recent **207.50 to 209.50** range, with the technical bias leaning toward further consolidation until the BoE’s March decision provides a definitive directional catalyst.

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