Sterling edges lower as UK waits for EU response to Brexit offer
- The pound has found little direction in recent days, and is back where it was at the start of the week.
- A European Parliament Brexit group believes the new proposals "do not represent a basis for an agreement"
LONDON: Sterling edged lower in early trade on Thursday as investors waited to receive a formal European Union response to Britain's latest Brexit offer.
The pound has found little direction in recent days, and is back where it was at the start of the week.
Analysts say the market is largely skeptical that the EU will agree to Britain's latest offer to avoid a no-deal departure from the European Union on Oct. 31. But with hedge funds covering some of their short bets against the pound, the currency has held at current levels.
A European Parliament Brexit group believes the new proposals "do not represent a basis for an agreement", according to the draft of a statement seen by Reuters ahead of release later in the day.
"It would be one monumental climbdown by the EU to go from a customs union backstop for either the whole of the UK or Northern Ireland with no time limit to a plan that does not entail a customs union and requires some form of border checks that has a potential rolling four-year time-limit attached," MUFG analysts said in a note.
"But for now, the hope of some breakthrough may continue to provide GBP support, but we don't see it lasting... We see building risks to the downside and expect the September lows to be tested pretty quickly in the coming days/weeks," they said, referring to the $1.1959 three-year low hit in early September.
On Thursday, the pound fell 0.1pc to $1.2284.
Against the euro it was little moved but managed a small gain to 89.045 pence per euro.
Should the EU reject Britain's Brexit proposal, attention will turn to the "Benn bill" that compels the government by Oct. 19 to seek an extension to Brexit until Jan. 31, 2020, if no deal is reached during an EU summit on Oct. 17 and 18.
But Boris Johnson, Britain's prime minister, again told his Conservative party at their annual conference on Wednesday that Britain would leave the EU on Oct. 31 with or without a deal.
Sterling had enjoyed a strong rally in late September as investors bet that lawmakers would be able to stop a no-deal exit.
"For me the risk-free buying opportunity comes when the Benn bill is followed through with and the ball is in the EU's court - the risk of them rejecting an extension is arguably too small for an extension not to be a given," said Simon Harvey, an FX analyst at Monex Europe.
Investors will also be watching for the September Purchasing Managers' Index survey for the all-important services sector, published at 0830 GMT.
A Reuters poll of economists is forecasting a reading of 50.3.
Comments
Comments are closed.