The British pound is jumping against the dollar on Thursday after the first official post-Brexit statistics on the UK's retail sector surprised massively to the upside.
The ONS' data showed that retail sales jumped 5.9% on a year-on-year basis, up from 4.3% in June, and well above the 4.2% growth that had been forecast by economists.
On a monthly basis, sales grew 1.4% compared to a 0.9% fall in June, and against a forecast of 0.2% growth.
As a result, sterling is bouncing, climbing almost 1% at around 10:00 a.m. BST (5:00 a.m. ET), 30 minutes after the data was released. That puts sterling at $1.3168 against the greenback, up from $1.3060 prior to the release. Here's how that jump looks on the day:
Investing.com
While it has jumped substantially on the day, sterling is still majorly depressed, sitting at 31-year lows against the dollar. On Monday, the currency hit a three-year low against the euro. Sterling has fallen by almost 14% since the
Despite Tuesday's rise, most experts expect more weakness from sterling, with HSBC arguing recently that sterling will fall to $1.10, and reach parity with the euro by the end of 2017. Other predictions about the pound's medium term outlook range from $1.20 at Goldman Sachs and $1.15 from Deutsche Bank, all the way to $1, a prediction made by former PIMCO executive Mohammed El-Erian.