Sterling eased from a two-week high and British stocks traded just below 11-month highs on Thursday on expectations that the Bank of England will ease policy soon after surprising many in the markets earlier by leaving interest rates unchanged. Eight out of the nine members of the BoE's monetary policy committee voted to keep rates on hold at 0.5 percent, wrong-footing the many investors who had expected a cut following Britain's shock vote on June 23 to leave the European Union.
Sterling forward interest rates, which had almost completely priced in a cut on Thursday, shifted briefly to remove any chance of rates going lower than 0.25 percent this year. In afternoon trade, they were once again pricing in a move below 0.25 percent in 6 months time.
Sterling soared to as high as $1.3480 after the BoE announcement, up more than 2 percent on the day and its strongest since June 30, having traded at $1.3210 beforehand. It later pared those gains to trade at $1.3335, up 1.4 percent. The pound was on track for a more than 2.9 percent weekly rise against the dollar - its best performance since 2009. Nevertheless, traders said the bounce is unlikely to last long given the expectations of easier monetary policy.
The BoE said it was likely to deliver stimulus in three weeks' time, possibly as a "package of measures", once it has assessed how the Brexit vote has affected the economy. "Given that officials left the door wide open for action in August, confirming (BoE chief Mark) Carney's comments on policy easing over the summer, we will treat the positive knee-jerk reaction in sterling as providing a strategic selling opportunity," said Charalambos Pissouros, senior analyst at IronFx Global.
"Potentially soft post-referendum data combined with expectations for August easing could bring sterling under renewed selling interest over coming weeks." Sterling has been boosted this week by Theresa May becoming Britain's new prime minister, which somewhat eased the political uncertainty prevailing since the referendum, and had driven sterling to a 31-year low of $1.2798 last week.
The sharp drop in the pound in the past few weeks translated into easier financial and monetary conditions, analysts said, enabling the BoE to buy more time until next month. Against the euro, too, sterling gained as much as 2 percent to hit a two-week high of 82.51 pence, before trimming gains to trade at 83.25 pence, around 1.3 percent up on the day. Before the policy announcement the euro had traded at around 84 pence.
Money market rates showed a slimmer chance of a rate cut from the European Central Bank next week. Forward EONIA rates showed around a 20 percent chance of a 10 basis points cut, down from around 30 percent before the BoE meeting. British government bond yields rose sharply. The 10-year gilt yield rose around 4 bp to the day's high of 0.815 percent, before easing back to 0.795 percent.
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