Pound tumbles to 31-year
low, Deutsche Bank bounces
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[October 04, 2016]
By Marc Jones
LONDON
(Reuters) - Britain’s pound slumped to a three-decade low on Tuesday as
its Brexit worries were compounded by a revitalized dollar, boosted by
resurgent U.S. interest rate hike expectations.
Sterling dropped to its weakest since 1985, hit by a growing sense that
the UK may be heading for a 'hard' Brexit where it severs links to the
EU's single market in favor of total control over immigration.
Robust construction data couldn't prevent another 0.5 percent fall for
the pound as it extended Monday's heavy tumble to wallow at $1.2764 <GBP=D4>
and a three-year low of 87.51 pence per euro <EURGBP=D4>.
"It is now abundantly clear that access to the single market is not on
(UK Prime Minister) Theresa May's list of top priorities and the market
is realizing that... there is more pressure for the pound in the weeks
and months ahead," said UniCredit's Global Head of FX Strategy,
Vasileios Gkionakis.
London's FTSE cheered the idea of a weaker pound boosting firms'
exports though as it rose 1 percent. Europe's bourses all rose, with a
3.2 percent jump from embattled Deutsche Bank <DBKGn.DE> also helping
the mood.
Asian shares had finished higher too. Japan's Nikkei leading the way
with a 0.8 percent gain after an upbeat U.S. manufacturing survey
bolstered the dollar and lowered the yen. <JPY=>
Royal Bank of Canada said the data was helping stabilize its economic
surprise index after a two-month run of negative surprises. Futures
markets are now pricing in a more than 60 percent chance the Fed inches
up U.S. interest rates before the end of the year.
The dollar index, which tracks the currency against a basket of six
major peers, hit a near 2-week high as it added 0.3 percent to 95.970 <.DXY>.
It was last at 102.495 yen <JPY=> and worth $1.1171 per euro. <EUR=>
The main economic indicator this week is Friday's non-farm payrolls
report. Employers are expected to have added 170,000 jobs in September,
according to the median estimate of 59 economists polled by Reuters.
GOLD LOSES SHINE
Bond markets were mixed, with U.S. Treasuries steady at 1.62 percent
after two days of rises, UK Gilt yields <GB10YT=RR> nudging up to 0.75
percent and southern euro zone yields squeezed higher as Italy announced
it was selling its first 50-year bond.
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A man walks past a stock quotation board outside a brokerage in
Tokyo, Japan, September 9, 2016. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Among
commodities, crude oil futures took a breather following sharp gains overnight
as Iran urged other oil producers to join OPEC in supporting the market.
U.S. crude <CLc1> was down 0.6 percent at $48.52 a barrel after closing up 1.2
percent on Monday. Brent <LCOc1> was down 0.4 percent at $50.68 after gaining
1.4 percent overnight.
Gold fell to its lowest in over two weeks meanwhile, as the dollar's strength
dulled its appeal, leaving it as low as $1,307.15.
"Despite the fact that we saw different types of crisis from Deutsche Bank to
Brexit, we can see that prices haven't gone beyond the resistance at $1,350,"
said Mark To, head of research at Hong Kong's Wing Fung Financial Group.
"It is a pessimistic sign that even the speculators could not capitalize on the
so-called bad news."
Elsewhere, Australia's dollar <AUD=> barely budged and its main share market <.AXJO>
ended 0.1 percent higher after Australia's central bank kept its main interest
rate at 1.5 percent after cuts in May and August.
"We think the case for no more cuts is strengthening," said Paul Bloxham, chief
economist Australia at HSBC. "Economic growth is strong, commodity prices have
risen, and the drag from the mining investment decline is set to fade."
(Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney and Ayai Tomisawa in Tokyo;
Editing by Dominic Evans)
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