GBP/USD Explodes Higher as Dollar Cracks and Cable Hits 4-Year Highs. 

The GBP/USD pair has staged a powerful rally, surging to levels not seen in more than four years as the US Dollar continues to lose ground across global markets. On Tuesday alone, the pair gained more than one percent, underscoring how aggressively investors are selling the Greenback amid mounting macro and geopolitical pressures.

At the heart of this move is not so much newfound strength in the Pound Sterling, but rather a broad-based collapse in the US Dollar. Ongoing trade war rhetoric from US President Donald Trump has once again shaken confidence in the Greenback, prompting investors to reassess the long-term outlook for US assets. As the Dollar weakens, currencies like the British Pound are finding fresh momentum almost by default.

GBP/USD, often referred to as “Cable,” is now on track for its second consecutive week of strong gains. Even more notably, the pair is poised to close higher for a third straight month, a clear sign that bullish momentum is accelerating. The recent upside push has driven prices into their highest territory in roughly 51 months, breaking through technical barriers that previously capped gains during the Pound’s mid-2025 rally.

On the UK side, the economic calendar remains relatively quiet. There are no major data releases driving the Pound directly, which means macro forces and global sentiment are firmly in the driver’s seat. In this environment, Sterling is behaving less like a currency reacting to domestic fundamentals and more like a beneficiary of the Dollar’s ongoing troubles.

Much of the market’s attention is now turning toward the US Federal Reserve. The Fed is set to announce its first interest rate decision of the year on Wednesday, and expectations are firmly anchored around no change. In other words, the rate decision itself is widely seen as a non-event. What traders care about far more is the language — specifically, any hints about when rate cuts might begin.

According to futures markets, investors are currently pricing in two quarter-point rate cuts by the end of 2026. Unless the Fed significantly alters its forward guidance, the meeting may do little to halt the Dollar’s slide. A cautious or dovish tone could even add fuel to the GBP/USD rally, reinforcing the idea that US monetary policy will gradually become less supportive of the Greenback.

Adding to the Dollar’s woes is the renewed escalation in trade tensions. President Trump’s recent tariff threats aimed at key European Union members — as well as the UK — have weighed on sentiment. His controversial remarks surrounding Greenland ownership have done little to reassure markets. Despite Trump’s claims that discussions are “progressing,” investors appear unconvinced that Europe is prepared to soften its stance or abandon potential counter-tariff measures.

From a technical perspective, GBP/USD looks undeniably strong. Buyers have pushed the pair through levels that previously acted as stubborn resistance, and momentum indicators suggest bullish interest remains robust. However, the psychological level of 1.4000 looms large. This round number represents a significant technical and emotional hurdle for traders, and history suggests that Cable rallies often face sharp pullbacks after extended one-sided moves.

Seasoned GBP/USD traders are well aware of this pattern: long stretches of steady gains followed by abrupt corrections. While the broader trend currently favors the upside, the risk of volatility remains high, especially as major central bank communication and geopolitical headlines continue to dominate market sentiment.

Zooming out, the bigger picture tells a story of shifting global dynamics. The Pound is not necessarily surging because the UK economy is firing on all cylinders, but because the US Dollar is losing its appeal amid policy uncertainty, trade friction, and evolving interest rate expectations. As long as these forces remain in play, GBP/USD may continue to trade with a bullish bias.

For now, the message from the market is clear: the Dollar is under pressure, and Cable is taking full advantage. Whether this rally extends toward 1.4000 or pauses for breath will depend largely on what the Fed says next — and how credible US trade policy appears in the eyes of global investors.

Source: FXStreet

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