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Interest Rates: UK vs US

The gap between Bank of England and Federal Reserve interest rates is arguably the single most powerful driver of GBP/USD. Here is how it works and how to read it.

Why rates drive currencies

Money tends to flow toward where it earns the most, adjusted for risk. If UK interest rates are higher than US rates, holding pounds (or pound-denominated bonds) pays more than holding dollars, which tends to support the pound — and vice-versa. This is the core mechanism behind the link between interest rates and exchange rates, and it is why GBP/USD traders watch the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve so closely.

The differential, not the level

What matters for GBP/USD is not the absolute level of UK or US rates but the differential between them — and, crucially, the expected future differential. Markets are forward-looking: by the time a rate decision is announced, the move is usually already priced in. The pound and dollar react to the part that was not expected — a surprise hike, a shift in the projected path, a change of tone. A central bank can move its currency without changing rates at all, simply by changing what investors expect it to do next.

How to read a rate decision for GBP/USD

Rates, inflation and the real yield

Interest rates do not move in isolation — they respond to inflation. A currency backed by high nominal rates but even higher inflation may be unattractive in “real” (inflation-adjusted) terms. The most durable currency strength tends to come from positive real yields: rates comfortably above inflation. That is why GBP/USD often reacts as much to CPI surprises as to the rate decisions themselves.

Interest-rate FAQ

How do interest rates affect GBP/USD?
Currencies with higher or rising interest rates tend to attract capital, all else equal. So when UK rates rise relative to US rates, the pound tends to strengthen against the dollar; when US rates rise relative to UK rates, the dollar tends to strengthen. The market trades the expected future gap, not just today’s.
What is the interest-rate differential?
It is the difference between the UK Bank Rate and the US federal funds rate (and, more importantly, between where markets expect each to be in future). This differential is one of the most reliable medium-term drivers of Cable.
Do rate cuts always weaken a currency?
Not always. If a cut is already fully expected, the currency may not move, or may even rise if the accompanying message is less dovish than feared. The surprise versus expectations is what matters.

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