Sterling Soars As Dollar Crashes On Weak U.S. Data

Sterling

Sterling rose to a two-week high on Friday after weak U.S. jobs data weighed on the dollar and bolstered the case for a Federal Reserve interest rate cut.

The pound is on course for its first weekly gain in five, helped mostly by an ailing dollar rather than because traders feel more confident that Britain can avoid a no-deal Brexit.

Investors have shied away from making big bets on the pound in recent weeks as a leadership contest to take over from Theresa May as prime minister and Conservative Party leader gets under way.

Boris Johnson, who campaigned to leave the European Union in the 2016 referendum, is favourite to win, worrying investors that he could set Britain on a course towards leaving the bloc without a deal.

That would send sterling hurtling lower, but this week the pound has managed to recover from five-month lows thanks to a dollar weakened by the prospect of Federal Reserve interest rate cuts.

The opposition Labour Party beat off the insurgent Brexit Party – which has sought to seize on anger with mainstream parties by pushing for a no-deal Brexit – in a by-election in eastern England overnight, although analysts said with the ruling Conservatives coming in third it would not improve sentiment towards the pound by much.

“The margin was, however, extremely narrow (700 votes) and the Conservatives were a fairly distant third, so we don’t expect GBP to find much relief from the recent rise in political risk premia,” said Adam Cole, strategist at RBC Capital Markets.

Sterling rose 0.4% to $1.2757, its highest since May 21 and leaving it up 0.8% this week after four consecutive weeks of losses.

Against the euro the British currency has struggled, too, and failed to make much of a recovery this week.

It traded flat at 88.88 pence against a resurgent euro . On Thursday, the euro had rallied after the European Central Bank sounded less dovish about monetary policy and the economic outlook than expected.