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Pound posts biggest two-day surge in 10 months as no-deal Brexit fears fade

Written by Business World, on 5th Sep 2019. Posted in World

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The pound surged to a five-week high on Thursday after lawmakers voted to prevent Prime Minister Boris Johnson taking Britain out of the EU on Oct. 31 without a transition agreement and his brother Jo quit the government, citing the national interest.

Political uncertainty remained high as the prime minister renewed his effort to seek an election on Oct. 15 after a first attempt was defeated on Wednesday. But sterling responded to a sense that a 'no-deal' Brexit had been averted for now.

"Removing the immediate threat of a 'no-deal' Brexit has helped the pound recover some of its recent weakness," said Daniel Trum and Dean Turner, strategists at UBS Wealth Management.

The British currency rose as much 0.8% to above $1.2350, its highest since July 29 and building on Wednesday's 1.4% surge, its biggest one-day jump since March.

Taking the gains over the last two sessions, the pound is on track for its biggest two-day rise in 10 months as some hedge funds are forced to unwind some of their extreme bearish bets.

The pound has been shunned in recent weeks as concerns grew that Britain would crash out of the EU without a deal on the scheduled date of Oct. 31. On Monday, it fell to below $1.20, a near-three-year low.

UBS analysts said that, if Brexit were delayed until January, and an election were set for a date after Oct. 31, the pound could rise as high as $1.30, a four-month high.

"A delay for both Brexit and general election will continue to send the pound higher," said Neil Jones, head of hedge-fund currency sales at Mizuho Bank.

The rally reverberated through the derivative markets as well. Two-month implied volatility gauges for pound options, which cover the scheduled Oct. 31 Brexit date, fell.

The drop in expected price swings for the pound indicated markets were unwinding extreme short-term negative bets.

Two-month implied volatility fell below 13 vol after rising to a three-year high of nearly 16 vol earlier this week.

Despite the rebound, the British currency remained more than 8% below its March highs of nearly $1.34, with many citing the uncertainty that an election would bring, whenever it is held.

"With the results from any election so hard to forecast and the difficulty of still fixing on a deal, we think further pound rallies are likely to be limited until we have clarity on outcomes," said John Marley, a senior FX consultant at FX risk management specialist, SmartCurrencyBusiness.

Against the euro, the British currency gained 0.3% to 89.74 pence. (Reuters)

Source: www.businessworld.ie

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