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GBP/CAD enters the new week having delivered the breakout 'bulls' were looking for.

Of all the charts we've studied for our Week Ahead Forecast series for today, GBP/CAD is the most interesting as there's a solid move underway that brings fresh multi-week highs to the table.

The pound-to-Canadian dollar exchange rate breaks to 1.8785, putting it at its highest level since January and on the cusp of a potentially major breakthrough.

As the chart shows, the pair has broken through the first layer of major resistance (1.87) that guards the top of a multi-month range that stretches all the way back to early-2025:



 

The move is supported by a rising 21-day moving average and a steadily strengthening RSI, which has moved into the mid-60s without yet reaching overbought territory. Together, these indicators suggest momentum remains firmly in sterlingโ€™s favour.

The 1.8700 area repeatedly capped rallies throughout 2025 and early 2026, meaning it represented one of the most important technical barriers on the chart.

Having overcome that hurdle, the market now has scope to explore higher levels, with the next obvious target sitting around 1.8815-1.8820, corresponding to the highs seen in late 2025 and early 2026.

That said, GBP/CAD is now approaching the upper boundary of a wider multi-month range, and traders should be alert to the possibility of some consolidation after the recent advance.

Near-term Consolidation Risks to Build

The RSI is rising toward overbought territory and the pair has rallied strongly over a short period. While this does not necessarily imply a reversal, it does suggest upside progress may become less linear.

Some near-term consolidation could therefore be warranted in the short-term, but the broader technical picture remains constructive and dips towards 1.8700 are likely to attract renewed buying interest.

Of course the big driver behind the CAD's losses is the fall in oil prices we're seeing at the start of the new week, confirming that a peace deal in the Middle East could handicap CAD bulls.

The headlines this Monday are that a Memorandum of Understanding for a peace framework will be signed between Iran and the U.S. later this week, with the opening of the Strait of Hormuz to follow shortly after.

That unlocks pent-up oil and gas exports from the region and that will suppress prices. For Canada, a major oil and gas exporter, this suggests a softening of the terms of trade benefits that were conferred by higher oil prices wrought by the conflict.

Also ahead is the renegotiation of the U.S.-Canada-Mexico trade agreement, due July. There's some concern that the U.S.-Canada aspect of the agreement will be difficult to finalise, so there's a decent chance that trade risk premiums also weigh on CAD going forward.