Markets Print edition: 2020-09-19

Sterling stays under pressure

Published September 19, 2020 Updated September 19, 2020 03:31am
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LONDON: Sterling edged lower on Friday as rising Covid-19 cases and the Bank of England signalling it is examining negative interest rates kept the currency under pressure. The pound was down 0.21% versus the euro at 0.9153 at 1453 GMT, and down 0.13% against the dollar at $1.2956, after falling to $1.2866 on Thursday when the BoE said it was looking more closely at sub-zero rates in case economic woes deepen.

After the pound gained some ground in early trade on data showing British shoppers kept spending last month, investors turned tail as Britain signalled it was considering whether to impose a second national lockdown. New Covid-19 cases almost doubled to 6,000 per day, hospital admissions rose and infection rates soared across parts of northern England and London.

The prospect of a chaotic end to the Brexit transition period in December if Britain fails to agree a trade deal with the European Union also continues to overhang sterling. The BoE kept its main stimulus programmes on hold this week, as expected, and said that Britain's economy had performed better than expected.

But highlighting risks relating to rising Covid-19 cases, the unwinding of jobs protection schemes, and Brexit, the BoE said it was ready to take further action. Kit Juckes, head of FX strategy at Societe Generale, said that with the pound already very close to record lows touched in 1976, "negative rates can take sterling to a new all-time low."