Saturday 13 March 2010

Pound up as UK inflation expectations rise


Pound up as UK inflation expectations rise

Sterling rose on Thursday after a slight uptick in inflation expectations, though analysts still expected economic and political concerns to keep the pound under pressure ahead of an upcoming general election.

 
Pound up as UK inflation expectations rise
Pound up as UK inflation expectations rise Photo: PA
The pound skidded to one-week lows against the dollar and euro on Wednesday after below-forecast manufacturing output figures added to a string of disappointing data.
But Britons' expectations for inflation over the next 12 months rose slightly, a survey from the Bank of England showed on Thursday, helping to underpin sterling, albeit temporarily.
"Inflation expectations showed a modest uptick and sterling has moved up on the day, but this is not overly significant. I don't think it will have any impact on Bank of England policy ahead," said Lee Hardman, currency strategist at BTM-UFJ.
Hardman added sterling's bounce was most likely flow-driven, reiterating his bearish stance on the pound going into a UK general election, widely expected in May.
At 1139 GMT, sterling was trading up around 0.4pc versus the dollar at $1.5050, off a one-week low of $1.4873 hit on Wednesday. Euro/sterling was down around 0.4pc at 90.75 pence, retreating from a high of 91.30 hit on Wednesday.
The Bank of England's trade-weighted sterling index edged up to 76.7 after falling to a fresh 11-month low at 76.4 on Wednesday. Sterling has fallen 7pc on a trade-weighted basis from its January highs.
Analysts remained jittery the threat of a hung parliament after the election would stymie efforts to deal with the UK's spiralling budget deficit.
Adding to the negative mix was concern over Britain's sovereign ratings after Fitch Ratings highlighted on Tuesday the UK's deteriorating credit profile.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown said on Wednesday he believed Britain would maintain its coveted top credit rating and announced a pay freeze for top civil servants to help tame a record deficit.
But worries over the public finances prevailed, with the deficit heading for 12pc of GDP this fiscal year.
"Markets are currently not very receptive to an overly casual approach to national finances. As a result the period of weakness in sterling is likely to continue," said Commerzbank analysts in a note.
Data releases in the UK are now sparse ahead of BoE minutes and employment data due next Wednesday.

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