The dollar rose to a one-week high on Friday after upbeat US gross domestic product data while Britain's pound slipped after a poll showed a narrowing lead for the ruling Conservatives before elections next month. The dollar index, which tracks the greenback against six major rivals, was up 0.11 percent to 97.357, after rising to a high of 97.512, its strongest since May 19.
The US economy slowed less than initially thought in the first quarter. Gross domestic product increased at a 1.2 percent annual rate instead of the 0.7 percent pace reported last month. "The GDP figure was a pleasant surprise. I don't think markets were looking for a revision this big," said Sireen Harajli, FX strategist at Mizuho in New York. "It confirms or at least gives some relief to the idea that the weakness that we had seen in economic performance is likely to be transitory."
The greenback weakened earlier this week after minutes of the Federal Reserve's most recent meeting showed policymakers agreed they should hold off on raising interest rates until it was clear a recent US economic slowdown was temporary. The dollar was down 0.63 percent against the yen to 111.11 after paring earlier losses and the euro slipped to a 1-week low of $1.1161 against the greenback.
Sterling dived about one percent against the dollar to a 1-month low of $1.2791 after a YouGov poll published on Thursday showed British Prime Minister Theresa May's lead narrowing to just 5 percentage points over the Labour opposition less than two weeks before a general election.
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