The past 24 hours or so of currency trading have been rather messy for the pound. Sterling briefly rallied back above the 1.29 level versus the US dollar yesterday afternoon as investors grew increasingly confident that a deal on Brexit could be struck that avoids the worst-case ‘no deal’ scenario. This comes after Prime Minister Johnson was able to pass his controversial Internal Market Bill through the House of Commons on Tuesday, despite strong opposition within the Tory Party. Meanwhile, economic data out of the UK yesterday was broadly encouraging. House prices according to Nationwide rose by a greater-than-expected 0.9% in September, aided in part by the stamp duty holiday announced by the government earlier in the year. Second quarter GDP was also revised upwards, with the UK economy contracting by 19.9% versus the 20.4% initially reported.
Source: Refinitiv Datastream Date: 01/10/2020This optimsm was quickly dashed this morning, however, amid headlines that EU and UK negotiators had failed to close the gap on state aid - one of the key sticking points in the ongoing Brexit discussions. The pound has already erased all of its gains from Wednesday at the time of writing and could be set for further losses should no common ground be found in the next few days.
Figure 1: UK House Price Growth [Nationwide] (2014 - 2020)
