Sterling hits 11-month high vs dollar
The British pound was steady against the dollar on Thursday having hit an 11-month high overnight after the Federal Reserve raised rates but signalled an end to its tightening cycle is in sight.
The US central bank raised its benchmark rate by a quarter point but dropped from its policy statement language that said it "anticipates" further rate increases would be needed, sending the dollar lower against other major currencies, including the pound.
"It (the pound) has capitalised on the weaker dollar in the wake of the dovish Fed decision," said George Vessey, foreign exchange and macro strategist at Convera.
By 1000 GMT, sterling was little changed against the dollar at $1.2567, having hit its highest level since June last year at $1.2593 overnight.
The pound was edging higher against the euro ahead of an expected rate increase from the European Central Bank on Thursday, with the size of the move still up for debate.
Markets are fully pricing in a 25 basis point move, with around a 20 per cent chance of a larger 50 basis point hike. Of 69 economists surveyed by Reuters, 57 expect a quarter-point move, with the other 12 forecasting a 50 basis point hike.
The euro was last down 0.1 per cent versus the pound at 87.94 pence. Meanwhile, a survey showed Britain's services sector had its fastest growth in a year in April, boosted by new orders, while prices charged by businesses picked up pace, adding pressure on the Bank of England to keep raising interest rates.
Comments