The pound fell yesterday after Bank of England governor Mark Carney shook the market’s confidence in an early interest rate hike, dealers said.
“Carney put an end to the debate, saying that markets should not bet on a May rate rise,” noted Jasper Lawler, head of research at London Capital Group.
Markets had been widely pricing in a quarter-point interest rate hike in May, to 0.75%, amid a pick-up in UK wage growth, but British economic data this week, including a sharp drop in retail sales, had started to dampen those expectations.
“Prepare for a few interest rate rises over the next few years,” Carney told the BBC.”I don’t want to get too focused on the precise timing, it is more about the general path.”
Higher interest rates typically boost a currency as holding it generates higher returns for investors.
The British currency came off its lows after Carney’s fellow BoE policymaker Michael Saunders hinted that he could vote for a hike in May.
The London stock market’s FTSE 100 index gained 0.5% at 7,348.17 points, outperforming its European peers, as the pound’s weakness boosted share prices of multinationals listed in London which derive much of their earnings in dollars. 
In company activity, Irish building materials group CRH topped the FTSE risers board, rising almost 4% on swirling speculation over a US listing and share buybacks, dealers said.
Among big losers, British consumer health giant Reckitt Benckiser saw its share price dive on a poor trading update.
Shire Pharmaceuticals fell sharply as fellow Irish drug maker Allergan ruled out a takeover bid to rival an offer by Japan’s Takeda, having earlier said it was mulling such a move.
Takeda, meanwhile, slightly raised its offer for Shire yesterday.
The Paris market posted slight gains with the CAC 40 up 0.4% at 5,412.83 points, and Frankfurt was down 0.2% at 12,540.50 points at close. The EURO STOXX 50 ended 0.2% up at 3,494.20 points.
Wall Street was down in the late New York morning trading as investors worried about rising bond yields, with some fearing that they may be a precursor to higher Fed rates.
While worries about the Syrian crisis and a potential China-US trade war keep dealers on edge, focus has for now moved to the corporate arena as the earnings season gets into full swing.
Oil prices ran into profit-taking after US President Donald Trump targeted Opec for what he said were artificially high oil prices, saying they “will not be accepted”.
His comments on Twitter came as ministers from some top global crude producers met in Saudi Arabia to discuss maintaining limits on oil production.




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