European Stock Markets
Sterling edged lower for a second consecutive day on Wednesday as
investors moved to the sidelines before the publication of a first EU
draft of a withdrawal treaty, while a dollar rebound also weighed on
sentiment.
Latest positioning data by
Commodity Futures Trading Commission on Friday showed that long sterling
positions were down substantially, at $8.2 billion compared to nearly
$33 billion in late January.
EU negotiator Michel Barnier accused the British government
on Tuesday of clinging to “illusion” while time runs out for a Brexit
deal to avoid massive disruption when Britain leaves the European Union
next year. The draft is due around 1100 GMT.
While
sterling has gained nearly 3 percent this year against the dollar
thanks to the greenback’s struggles in the opening weeks of 2018, it has
only gained 1 percent against the euro in that period and has remained
well within a 87-89 pence per euro range.
On Wednesday, sterling was trading 0.2 percent lower at $1.3893 while it was broadly flat at 87.88 pence against the euro.
It remains considerably below a post-Brexit referendum high of $1.4346 hit late last month.
As
more Brexit-related headlines have emerged in recent weeks, investors
have whittled down long positions in sterling despite some optimistic
comments from central bank policymakers in recent weeks.
British
officials accuse Brussels of eschewing creative solutions to avoid
trade disruption, while EU leaders complain that Prime Minister Theresa
May’s divided government is failing to make its intentions clear.
Barnier
spoke of “significant points of disagreement” on the transition, and
suggested Britain was trying to keep it open-ended. EU governments are
keen that it does not become a long-term arrangement, though most are
willing to consider extending it into 2021 if a future trade deal takes
longer to take effect.

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