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Trading the GBP/USD Currency Pair – A Beginner’s Guide

Last Update: August 25th, 2022

The British pound/U.S. dollar currency pair denotes the exchange rate between the British pound and the U.S. dollar. The pair expresses the relationship as the number of dollars needed to buy one pound.

For example, if the GBP/USD exchange rate is 1.20000, you need $1.20 to buy one pound. In this pair, the pound is the base currency, and the U.S. dollar is the quote currency.

With an impressive daily turnover of about $432 billion, GBP/USD is the second most traded currency pair in the world. The total daily turnover in the forex market is approximately $5.9 trillion as of 2021, which means the GBP/USD represents about 13.65% percent of this colossal amount.

The new polymer-based £20 note

A Brief History of the Pound

Of course, the pound is a much older currency than the U.S. dollar. It’s been around for more than 1,200 years. In the 8th century, in the Anglo-Saxon era, 1 pound was the equivalent of a pound of silver – hence the name sterling. 

From the 700s to the 1900s, sterling was considered a valuable, strong currency. In 1717, Sir Isaac Newton, as Master of the Mint, defined the pound in terms of gold rather than silver, which lasted nearly 200 years.

As the pound was stripped of its gold standard and then put back on it by Winston Churchill in the early 1900s, the price of 1 pound fluctuated. As it returned to the gold standard in 1925, £1 was the equivalent of $4.86; when it came off again in 1931, it dropped to $3.69. 

Since then, various economic crises and political events have further devalued the pound against the dollar, leaving prices under $1.33/pound as the UK voted to leave the EU in 2016.

The United States Dollar

Although it’s not nearly as old as the pound, the U.S. dollar has been the United States’ standard monetary unit for more than 200 years.

The U.S. dollar is the most traded currency on this planet. It is also the world’s number one reserve currency because of its use as the ‘petrodollar’, an agreement made by oil-producing countries to trade oil in dollars.

How the GBP/USD is Traded

Although there are other ways to trade this currency pair, we’ll focus only on how it’s done in retail forex trading.

Pip Value of the GBP/USD

A pip is an incremental price change, with a particular value depending on the market in the subject. It’s a standard unit for gauging how much an exchange rate has fluctuated in value. A pip is the smallest increment in which GBP/USD’s price can move.

To establish the pip value of the GBP/USD, we first need to consider what a pip is. If the GBP/USD is trading at 1.20010 and the exchange rate moves to 1.20020, it has moved one pip higher. The fourth digit after the decimal point is called a pip.

To calculate the pip value of the GBP/USD, we’ll use a 1K lot as an example. On GBP/USD, one pip is 0.0001, or 1/10000 of one U.S. dollar. Multiply this by 1000, and you get $0.10. This is the pip value of a micro lot (1k lot) of the GBP/USD.

GBP/USD Lot Size

A standard lot in forex is 100,000 of a particular currency pair. However, most retail forex brokers offer lot sizes as small as 0.01 lots, which is 1000 of the particular currency pair. This is called a micro lot. Some trading platforms denote this as a 1K lot size. Others refer to a 1K lot as one unit.

A 1K lot sounds like a considerable trade size for a small investor. After all, how would someone with a $500 account be able to open a £1000 position?

Well, the great thing about trading forex is that retail brokers allow you to trade with leverage. The leverage offered by retail forex brokers generally varies between 1:100 and 1:1000. Some brokers offer ridiculously high leverage of 1:2000, 1:3000, and even 1:5000.

Of course, some countries regulate the amount of leverage you can use as a retail forex trader. For example, the United States allows maximum leverage of 1:50.

Let’s use 1:100 leverage as an example. If you have a $500 account and you want to open a 1K trade on the GBP/USD, you will need less than $13.00 to open this position.

This is based on an exchange rate of 1.29500 dollars per 1 pound. This would be impossible without using leverage because a 1K lot of GBP/USD is worth $1295.

Profit and Loss Calculation

Pound notes with calculator

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Let’s calculate how much money you’d make if you traded a GBP/USD signal with 12 micro lots and hit a profit target of 276 pips. Twelve micro lots is 12,000 of the GBP/USD currency pair. If we multiply this by $0.0276, which is 276 pips, we get $331.20 (12,000 x $0.0276=$331.20).

If that sounds a little bit complicated, you can just multiply the pip value of a 1K lot, which is $0.10, by the number of micro lots traded, and multiply this number by the number of pips you made: $0.10 pip value x 12 micro lots x 276 pips = $331.20.

Instruments Correlated to the GBP/USD

Correlated Currencies

There are other pairs generally correlated to the GBP/USD, primarily because of the dollar element. Some of the pairs with the highest correlation to GBP/USD include: 

  • GBP/SGD: 0.95
  • USD/CZK: -0.86
  • NZD/USD: 0.85
  • USD/SEK: -0.82
  • EUR/USD: 0.78
  • AUD/USD: 0.76

Correlated Equity Indices

Like most currencies, GBP/USD is usually negatively correlated with its native equity market. As the pound gets stronger, exports become more expensive, which is dangerous for one of the top service-exporting countries in the world. This often causes the FTSE 100, the UK’s stock index, to fall.

Major Economic Events that Impact the GBP/USD

Of the many economic events that influence the GBP/USD, there are a few that can cause substantial volatility in this exchange rate:

1. Monetary Policy – Actions and Comments by Central Banks

Monetary policy is one of the most critical drivers of GBP/USD. The Federal Reserve of the United States and the Bank of England are in charge of their countries’ monetary policies.

When the Fed or BoE comments or takes action regarding interest rates, quantitative easing, inflation, or economic growth forecasts, it often causes violent moves in the GBP/USD exchange rate.

For example, more aggressive hikes in interest rates from the U.S. have recently caused the dollar to appreciate against the pound, causing GBP/USD to fall.

Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England (BoE)

2. Economic Indicators

Economic indicators are used to analyze how well an economy is performing and to predict future economic growth. There are three main categories of economic indicators; leading, lagging, and coincident.

For the UK, the most notable economic indicators are: 

  • Gross Domestic Product (GDP) – a quarterly measure of the economy’s overall growth
  • Employment statistics – Unemployment data has a particular significance in the UK
  • Consumer Price Index (CPI) – A measure of inflation that the UK aims to keep around 2%
  • Retail sales – In a consumer-driven economy, retail sales gauge how consumption is trending.

In the U.S., the most significant economic indicators are essentially the same. However, there are another two that have a big impact:

  • Non-farm Payrolls (NFPs) – A measure of the number of people in employment in the U.S., which acts as a significant indicator of how the job market and overall economy is doing.
  • Industrial output – The U.S. has much more of an industrial and manufacturing focus than the UK, so data like Industrial Production is used to gauge this huge part of the economy.

These aren’t the only indicators that impact the price of GBP/USD. Any economic news from the United Kingdom and the United States can move the GBP/USD exchange rate considerably.

Politics

As the U.S dollar is the world’s reserve currency, it’s not uncommon to see flights to safety in the dollar. However, it’s not as black and white as that. Political events can cause the pound or dollar to rise and fall, with events like the U.S.-China trade war, elections, and Brexit significantly affecting prices. When tensions are high, money might even flow out of the dollar into a preferred safe-haven asset, like gold or the Japanese Yen.

For example, the Brexit vote severely damaged confidence in sterling and caused it to plummet by over 8% in the month of June 2016, its biggest one-month drop in over a decade.

GBP/USD often makes powerful moves in short periods of time. It’s important to keep this in mind when you trade this pair.

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About the author

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Skerdian Meta // Lead Analyst
Skerdian Meta Lead Analyst. Skerdian is a professional Forex trader and a market analyst. He has been actively engaged in market analysis for the past 11 years. Before becoming our head analyst, Skerdian served as a trader and market analyst in Saxo Bank's local branch, Aksioner. Skerdian specialized in experimenting with developing models and hands-on trading. Skerdian has a masters degree in finance and investment.