Sterling edges lower against dollar

26 Jun, 2021

LONDON: Sterling edged lower on Friday and was on track for its worst month against the dollar since September after the Bank of England kept its policy unchanged.

The BoE on Thursday kept the size of its stimulus programme at the same level and left its benchmark interest rate at an all-time low of 0.1%.

It also said inflation would surpass 3% as Britain's economy reopens, but the climb further above its 2% target would only be temporary.

"Sterling was the worst-performing G-10 currency after the BoE pushed back against some of the hawkish speculation that had arisen, particularly since the Fed's shift last week," said Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid.

Last week, sterling dropped below $1.38 against a strengthening dollar after the US Federal reserve surprised markets by signalling it would raise interest rates and end emergency bond-buying sooner than expected.

Investors had hoped a more optimistic economic assessment from the BoE would push sterling back towards $1.40.

Sterling was down 0.1% against the dollar at $1.3907 at 1450 GMT, on track for its worst month against the greenback since September 2020. Against the euro, the pound was 0.3% lower at 85.90 pence, after hitting a nine-day low.

News of the rapid spread of the Delta Covid-19 variant in Britain has also weighed marginally on sentiment.

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