EUR/GBP trimmed losses to near 0.8660 in early European trading on Wednesday. The Pound dipped against the Euro after the UK inflation report, with PMI flash readings for the Eurozone and the UK due on Thursday.
UK headline CPI eased to 2.8% year-on-year in April, down from 3.3% in March and below the 3.0% forecast. Core CPI rose 2.5% year-on-year, down from 3.1% and below the 2.6% consensus.
Uk Inflation Surprise And Sterling Reaction
Monthly CPI was 0.7% in April, matching March’s 0.7% and below the 0.9% forecast. GBP weakened against EUR after the data, while UK rate futures implied about 52 bps of Bank of England tightening by December, versus about 60 bps on Tuesday.
Reuters reported that Chancellor Rachel Reeves is set to announce reforms to give parliament authority to approve energy schemes. In the Euro area, ECB officials warned that an energy shock linked to the Hormuz Strait could lift inflation.
Martin Kocher said a June rate rise would be unavoidable if the strait remains closed. Joachim Nagel said the ECB may need to act in June if the shock persists, and a Reuters poll found about 85% expect a 25 bps rise to 2.25%.
Given today is May 20, 2026, we are looking back at the situation as it unfolded in May 2025.
Policy Divergence And Trading Implications
The UK’s April 2025 inflation data, which came in softer than we expected at 2.8%, has significantly changed the outlook for the Pound. This cooling price pressure makes the Bank of England less likely to pursue aggressive rate hikes. The market immediately reflected this, as we saw expectations for tightening by December 2025 fall from 60 to 52 basis points.
This view is reinforced when we look at broader economic activity from that time. For instance, looking back at data from the spring of 2025, we recall that UK retail sales volumes had shown a sharp decline, falling by 2.3% in the month prior, signalling a slowdown in consumer spending. This combination of weaker inflation and consumption gives the Bank of England a clear reason to adopt a more cautious stance.
Conversely, the signals from the European Central Bank in May 2025 were pointing in the opposite direction. Hawkish comments from policymakers like Nagel and Kocher, driven by fears of persistent inflation linked to energy shocks, solidified our expectations for a rate hike in June 2025. At the time, eurozone core inflation had remained stubbornly above 3.5% for several consecutive months, justifying the ECB’s more aggressive policy.
This clear divergence in monetary policy paths suggests positioning for a higher EUR/GBP exchange rate in the coming weeks. We should be considering strategies that benefit from this expected upward move in the pair. Buying EUR/GBP call options with expirations set for late June 2025 would directly target the anticipated ECB rate decision as a key catalyst.
The immediate event to watch will be the preliminary PMI data due later this week in May 2025. A surprisingly strong UK services PMI or a weak Eurozone manufacturing report could temporarily disrupt this narrative. Therefore, any positions should be sized to account for potential short-term volatility around these releases.
With central bank policies moving in opposite directions, an increase in currency volatility is almost certain. This environment makes options strategies like bull call spreads particularly useful. Such a strategy allows us to express a bullish view on EUR/GBP while defining our risk and limiting potential losses if the market moves unexpectedly against us.