Sterling gained ground against the dollar on Wednesday as the US currency's rally eased a touch, and on news that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was in "clinically stable" condition after being rushed into intensive care.
Recent trading sessions have seen the pound jerked around by news of the British leader's health but overall, the currency has traded sideways against a fluctuating dollar as investors parse incoming news on the coronavirus pandemic.
"We're looking more at a dollar movement rather than a sterling movement," said Marshall Gittler, head of investment research at BDSwiss.
"In general, we're seeing much less idiosyncratic movements from individual currencies - there tends to be a risk-on/risk-off move in general - everyone's just watching the virus case count it seems."
By 1455 GMT, the pound was 0.3% higher against the dollar at $1.2368 and 0.5% higher to the euro at 87.80 pence.
Traders also noted the pound was receiving some support from record investor demand for British government bonds.
Incoming economic data in the UK remained downbeat, weighing on the fundamental outlook for a currency that is down 7% to the dollar and almost 4% to the euro this year.