The
Office for National Statistics said February retail sales
volumes were down by 0.3% from January as stormy weather
deterred some shoppers from venturing out.
Meanwhile, a survey by GfK showed British consumer confidence
fell to its lowest level since November 2020 in March because of
inflation worries, high interest rates and the war in Ukraine.
The pound gradually slipped against the dollar to trade 0.1%
lower at $1.3174.
Against the euro, sterling fell as much as 0.3% to 83.68 pence,
its weakest level against the single currency since Monday,
before staging a slight recovery.
"Sterling’s limited reaction to the data is indicative of the
limited volatility in the pair around current levels," analysts
at Monex Europe said, highlighting that volatility had "dried
up" following Wednesday's budget announcement.
On Wednesday, British finance minister Rishi Sunak announced a
cut to fuel duty and softened some of a looming payroll tax as
he sought to alleaviate a severe cost-of-living squeeze against
the backdrop of slowing economic growth.
(Reporting by Samuel Indyk; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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