Pound LIVE: Sterling SOARS against euro after Brexit
BACKLASH in local election polls
THE pound is rising
against the euro and US dollar this afternoon as local election results suggest
both the Conservatives and Labour have suffered huge losses.
By LEVI WINCHESTER,ABDULMUMINI
ADEKU…
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At the time of writing, the Tories have so far endured a
disastrous result, losing more than 850 seats and 30 councils overall. Labour
has lost more than 90 seats, while the Liberal Democrats benefited from the
losses with a 500-seat gain. Connor Campbell, analyst at Spreadex, said:
"Sterling emerged as one of Friday’s big winners. "Cable’s 0.4
percent rise pushed it back to $1.308, having slipped under $1.30 earlier in
the session, while against the euro it hit a fresh, €1.17-teasing one-month
peak.
"The currency’s growth may be related to the local election
results, one that say big losses for the Tories and Labour and significant
gains for overtly pro-Remain parties like the Lib Dems and Greens."
The pound had broken through the €1.170 barrier after 3pm
UK time and was trading at €1.1723.
Against the US dollar, Sterling was worth $1.3110.
Sterling dropped yesterday after the Bank of England held
interest rates at 0.75 percent but warned the state of the UK economy will
depend on how Britain leaves the European Union.
The pound takes its
orders from Westminster, not the City at the moment
Jeremy Cook, WorldFirst
The pound lost ground as the UK lender said UK economic growth
risks being buffeted in the near-term due to political uncertainty.
But the BoE added the economy has been boosted from
companies in the UK and the European Union building stocks ahead of recent
Brexit deadlines.
The BoE said it does not expect rates to reach 1 percent until
the final three months of 2021.
It is forecasting gross domestic product (GDP) in Britain to
grow by 1.5 percent this year, up from just 1.2 percent forecast in February.
Jeremy Cook, head of currency strategy at WorldFirst in London,
suggested the pound is still being dictated to by Brexit.
He said: “Sterling is not reacting to the bank’s latest
decision.
“The pound takes its orders from Westminster, not the City at
the moment."
Sterling has struggled in recent weeks due to lack of Brexit
movement, but managed to claw back ground on Wednesday after reports suggested
the tone of Conservative and Labour talks had improved.
Before the decision for Britain to leave the EU took place, the
pound was trading at $1.50 against the US dollar.
A Reuters poll recently found analysts are forecasting the pound
to go as high as $1.45 in the run-up to the new divorce date of 31 October,
2019.
On the lower end of predictions, currency watchers anticipated
$1.23.
John Fahey at AIB said: “In the event of progress with regard to the
Withdrawal Agreement being passed by the UK Parliament or if a parliamentary
consensus emerges, sterling could rally.
“Any move that markets view as increasing the probability of a
no-deal Brexit could see sterling come under pressure.”
In a related issue,several months ago, The News office Desk of
the E.N.M.Paedia Express Multimedia Group of Lagos,Nigeria had in exclusives
insisted that the British economy will only be boosted if it wants to answer the
hurdles posed by Brexit by devaluing its currency and taking its Agricultural policies
very seriously but this has being like one man clapping with a single finger.
This medium had taken this position after speaking to Mr Babatunji Wusu who had written a thesis in his post graduates years on Brexit in one of the leading European Universities
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