|

As Theresa hangs on to power for another day the pound focuses on the positives

After starting on the front foot, the FTSE steadily declined before bouncing off session lows of 7069 and rebounding higher towards the close. The FTSE resumed its inverse trading pattern to the pound which had fractured in the previous session.  Multinationals whose balance sheets are negatively affected by the stronger pound dominated the FTSE loser board for much of the session. The Royal Bank of Scotland also extended losses from the previous day.  Losses for RBS across the week stand at over 14% as investors price in the possibility of Jeremy Corbyn taking power and breaking up the bank. That is clearly a trade no one wants to be on the wrong side of.

The pound was in a more upbeat mood on Friday as Brexit panic eased and the pace of developments in Westminster slowed. Whilst we remain unsure as to exactly how many letters have been submitted to the Chairman of the 1922 Committee, the pound was willing to focus on today’s positive political developments.  With confirmation from Michael Give and other Brexiteer cabinet ministers that they were willing to stay put, Theresa May’s positions looks less fragile, for now. This increased stability of May’s position boosted the pound back over $1.2850 for much of the session. One-month implied volatility on the pound has increased over 15%. To put that into perspective, it is double the implied volatility of the euro and is breaching levels reserved for emerging market currencies.

Speculation surrounding a vote of no confidence is expected to remain, with suggestions that a vote could take place on Tuesday. Political analysts believe that the odds are in Theresa May’s favour to win a vote of no confidence, purely because there is no suitable alternative who won’t spilt the party. However, even if Theresa May does win, she will still have the enormous task of trying to get the deal through Parliament, the prospects of which look dubious at best. The pound is fully aware of the mammoth task that lies ahead meaning any gains will be capped.

Dollar recovers from earlier decline

A weaker dollar supported the pound during the European session, following more dovish than expected comments from two Fed officials. However, these losses were reversed later in the session on stronger than forecast US manufacturing data. Next week the US economic calendar is light and Thursday is Thanksgiving, this is a time of year characterised by low liquidity in the market and will come at a time when there is plenty of scope for headlines on pensive topics potentially making for several volatile sessions.

Author

More from Fiona Cincotta
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD clings to gains around 1.1800

EUR/USD manages to regain composure and retests the 1.1800 region in quite a positive start to the week. The pair’s bounce follows the US Dollar’s offered stance post-SCOTUS ruling ahead of important US data and Fedspeak on Tuesday.

GBP/USD looks stuck around 1.3500 amid firm gains

GBP/USD is pushing further north on Monday, revisiting the 1.3500 hurdle and beyond. Cable’s uptick is largely being fuelled by the broader softness in the Greenback, amid lingering uncertainty around tariffs.

Gold pops above $5,200, four-week highs

Gold is holding onto its bullish tone on Monday, reaching new multi-week highs just past the $5,200 mark per troy ounce. Fresh trade-war concerns, coupled with rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, are keeping demand for the yellow metal well on the rise.

Ethereum Price Forecast: BitMine's holdings reach 4.42 million ETH as Fundstrat predicts 87% win-ratio

Ethereum (ETH) treasury firm BitMine Immersion Technologies (BMNR) scooped up 51,162 ETH last week, marking its largest purchase since December.

Supreme Court nixes tariffs, Trump teases 15% global tariff

On February 20th, the Supreme Court ruled that Trump’s global tariffs under IEEPA authority were unconstitutional, effectively nullifying the framework. However, the relief was short-lived. Within hours, Trump floated a 15% blanket tariff under an alternative legal authority.

XRP recovers slightly as bearish sentiment dominates crypto market

Ripple is rising above $1.40 at the time of writing on Monday amid fresh tariff-triggered headwinds in the broader cryptocurrency market. The sell-off to $1.33, the token’s intraday low, can be attributed to macroeconomic uncertainty, geopolitical tensions and risk-averse sentiment among other factors.