The pound’s recent resilience may prove short-lived as data showed the first indications that the UK economy may be faltering one month after Britain voted to leave the European Union.
Inflation and labour figures covering the pre-Brexit period, released earlier last week, beat analyst predictions and helped the currency climb from a 31-year low versus the dollar set on July 6. That rally ended Friday after purchasing managers’ index reports, which included the period following the June 23 referendum, suggested the UK’s manufacturing and services industries contracted this month.
The PMI data helped revive bets the Bank of England will loosen monetary policy as early as next month. Futures showed an 87% chance the Monetary Policy Committee will cut its key interest rate from a record-low 0.5% on August 4, compared with odds of 52% after the central bank’s July 14 announcement, when officials left policy unchanged.
“Now we’ve got confirmation, we’ve got real data confirmation from PMI,” said Neil Jones, head of hedge-fund sales in London at Mizuho Bank. “It should be exactly the type of fundamental macro shift indicated by the data the MPC is looking for to cut rates, so it should clear the way to remove any doubt for a rate cut in August.”
The pound fell 0.8% last week to $1.3092 as of 5:09pm London time on Friday, having climbed to as much as $1.3481 on July 15, the day after the BoE’s policy announcement. Sterling depreciated 0.1% to 83.76 pence per euro, after strengthening 1.9% a week earlier.
The British currency was boosted earlier this month by the BoE’s decision to keep policy unchanged and better-than-expected data that excluded the period since the referendum. Citigroup Inc’s Economic Surprise Index, which measures the strength of data relative to analyst expectations, fell for the first time in 14 days on Friday, having climbed to the highest level in almost three years a day earlier. A positive reading shows that data releases were stronger than economists expected.
The pound’s rally from its three-decade low of $1.2798 may have peaked at the end of last week, according to Chris Turner, London-based head of currency strategy at ING Group NV.
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