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Sterling on Friday rocketed to its highest level against the dollar since the vote to leave the European Union, after a report that the Netherlands and Spain were open to a deal for Britain to remain as close as possible to the trading bloc. The pound traded up more than one percent on the day at $1.3692, its highest since June 24, 2016, when the pound plunged after Britain voted to quit the EU.
The gains came after Bloomberg reported that the Spanish and Dutch finance ministers had agreed to work together for a Brexit agreement that maintains close ties between the EU and Britain, in what would be a clear divergence in views among the 27 EU member states about how to treat Britain after it leaves.
Officials from the Spanish and Dutch finance ministries denied that they are breaking from the EU official position, media reported.
Sterling was already gaining on Friday before the report, helped by demand for euros and the continued weakness for the dollar, before spiking higher. "I would suggest this [sterling's jump] is purely because of news that the Dutch and Spanish are open to a softer Brexit," Neil Jones, Mizuho's head of hedge fund currency sales in London.
"It's not so significant as the rally would suggest. Just because two of the 27 members say this, it doesn't mean a softer Brexit will happen. I doubt it's as straightforward as that," he said. After slumping in 2016, the pound last year had its best performance in a decade as Britain made some progress on negotiating its exit from the European Union and economic data came in better than expected.
Some traders expect Britain to secure a transition deal to leave the bloc soon, which could help sterling lift higher. Sterling held on to Friday's gains, trading up 1.1 percent at $1.3686 by 1645 GMT. Against the euro, which has rallied since minutes from the European Central Bank on Thursday pointed to tighter monetary policy in the euro zone, sterling was up 0.3 percent at 88.64 pence per euro.
The FTSE 100 briefly fell into negative territory and touched its session low before rebounding. Two-year gilt yields rose more than 5 basis points on the day to peak at 0.615 percent, their highest level since January 4, 2016. Five-year gilt yields rose more than 6 basis points on the day to 0.885 percent, matching the post-Brexit vote high of 0.885 percent set on October 25.
Nomura currency strategist Jordan Rochester said the move higher for sterling was driven by a "big algo move", referring to an algorithmic trade, while he also played down attaching too much importance to the Bloomberg report. "I'm sceptical this (report) is necessarily a game-changer at this stage as there will also be member states pushing the other way," he said.

Copyright Reuters, 2018

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