The Bank of England's next move is more likely to be up than down, while the Swiss National Bank remains frozen at 0% — and GBP/CHF is pricing in that divergence.
GBP/CHF surged to its highest level since January this week, breaking through key resistance at 1.0674 and completing a head-and-shoulders bottom formation that points to further gains. The cross now trades near 1.0750, supported by a 375-basis-point interest rate differential between the BoE's 3.75% and the SNB's 0.00%.
"The break above 1.0674 confirms a head-and-shoulders bottom with the left shoulder at 1.0362, head at 1.0281, and right shoulder at 1.0674," said ActionForex technical analysts. "Bullish convergence on both daily and weekly MACD supports the case for further upside."
The fundamental backdrop reinforces the technical picture. Bank of England Chief Economist Huw Pill voted for an immediate rate increase at the last meeting, and the Monetary Policy Committee continues to monitor whether elevated energy prices feed through into wages and services inflation. Markets have largely ruled out a hike at next week's meeting but continue to price the possibility of an "insurance hike" later this year, most likely around the July or September meetings.
The Swiss National Bank faces a starkly different reality. Swiss consumer price inflation slowed to 0.6% year-over-year in May, below expectations and comfortably within the SNB's 0%-2% target range. Investors are convinced the SNB will keep rates at 0% through the remainder of 2026, removing any meaningful pressure for tightening.
Rate Differentials Widen to 375bps
The yield advantage Sterling enjoys over the Swiss Franc is already substantial at 375 basis points. Markets do not need a series of additional BoE hikes to justify further GBP/CHF strength — they simply need confidence that the next move from the BoE is more likely to be up than down while the SNB remains firmly on hold.
The last time the BoE signaled a potential hike while the SNB was on hold was in mid-2024, when GBP/CHF rallied from 1.1200 to 1.1600 over three months before the BoE ultimately cut rates in August. This time, the dynamics differ: the BoE cut to 3.75% from 5.25% over 2025, but the debate has shifted back toward tightening as inflation risks persist.
Technical Targets Point Higher
The completed head-and-shoulders bottom projects a measured move target of 1.0861, calculated as the 100% projection of the 1.0281-to-1.0674 rally from the 1.0468 neckline. A decisive break above 1.0861 would argue the rise from 1.0281 is an impulsive wave entering upside acceleration, with the 161.8% projection at 1.1104 as the next target.
Further gains are expected as long as the 55-day exponential moving average, now at 1.0581, holds as support. The bullish MACD convergence on both daily and weekly timeframes provides additional confirmation that the broader downtrend from the 2024 high may have already ended.
What's at Stake
If expectations for a BoE insurance hike become more firmly established in the months ahead, Sterling's yield advantage could provide additional fuel for the move toward 1.1104. Conversely, if UK inflation data softens or the BoE signals it is done with tightening, the divergence trade would lose its anchor. The next test comes with the BoE's rate decision next week, followed by UK CPI data and the SNB's quarterly monetary policy assessment in September.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.