European Stock Markets
Sterling edged up against the dollar on Tuesday, continuing a modest
rebound from three-week lows hit on Friday, as traders eyed UK inflation
data for clues on when and how fast the Bank of England will raise
interest rates.
It
was around a cent above Friday’s low by 0850 GMT at $1.3868, up 0.2
percent on the day. Against the euro, sterling was flat at 88.89 pence.
Consumer price index (CPI) numbers due at 0930 GMT are
expected to show inflation annual
inflation eased to 2.9 percent in
January, from 3 percent the previous months - still well above the BoE’s
2 percent target. Core inflation, meanwhile, is expected to tick up to
2.6 percent from 2.5 percent in December.
Last week the
BoE said it expected to raise interest rates earlier and by more than
it had thought in late 2017, because of the strength of the global
economy and signs that British pay growth was picking up speed.
A a weaker inflation print
would result in much selling of the pound.
The clear message from the
BoE last week was that domestically generated inflation risks are
rising.
So, even a softening of inflation today on less sterling
depreciation passthrough is unlikely to change the thinking much within
the MPC (monetary policy committee).
The pound skidded
to a three-week low against the dollar on Friday after the EU’s chief
Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier warned a transition deal was far from
assured.
Those comments, as well as broad strength in
the dollar amid a sharp stock market sell-off, handed sterling its
biggest weekly falls since October, as investors worried that Britain
could leave the European Union in a disorderly manner.

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