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The pound continues to dive after dollar 'sucker punch'

Aug 10, 2018, 14:25 IST

Markets Insider

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  • UK GDP estimates in-line: a quarterly growth of 0.4% and annual growth of 1.3%.
  • The figures failed to revive the pound, which hit a fresh year low against the dollar on Friday morning.
  • Sterling is suffering from "no deal" Brexit fears and a strong dollar.


LONDON - In line UK GDP growth in the second quarter failed to revive the bombed-out pound on Friday.

The UK Office for National Statistics said on Friday morning that its preliminary estimate for UK GDP growth in the second quarter was 1.3%, in line with economists' forecasts and up from 1.2% in the first quarter. Quarter-on-quarter growth came in at 0.4%, in line with consensus forecasts and up from 0.2% in the previous quarter.

The figures failed to do much to reverse the poor performance of the pound on Friday. Sterling has been under pressure all week amid rising fears of a "no-deal" Brexit. A rallying dollar put more pressure on the currency. The dollar index, which measures the currency's strength against a basket of others, hit its highest level since June 2017 on Friday.

The pound was down 0.5% against the dollar to $1.2761 at 9.31 a.m. GMT (5.31 a.m. ET), a minute after GDP figures were released. It marks a fresh 11-month low for the pound against the dollar.

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"The fears of a no-deal Brexit have piled the pressure on the pound and the dollar's rally has come as a sucker punch," Neil Wilson, the chief market analyst at Markets.com, said in an email.

The pound was up around 0.11% against the euro at the same time. The euro is suffering amid concerns about possible contagion from Turkey's economy and currency spreading to eurozone banks.

Connor Campbell, a financial analyst with SpreadEx, said: "That the pound managed to nudge higher against the euro, alongside the single currency's own 0.7% slide against the greenback, suggests Friday's fall is a tad more informed by trade war-fearing investors pouring into the safe-haven dollar than the week's 'no deal' Brexit concerns (though that undoubtedly isn't helping)."

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