It was slightly softer against the euro, down 0.1% at 87.94 pence, not too far from a one-month high against the single currency hit earlier this month. . "The BoE meeting on Thursday is containing any large moves in sterling at the moment. But today's data will certainly not have inspired much confidence in the outlook for the UK economy going forward, and I think this is weighing on the pound," said Stuart Cole, head macro economist at Equiti Capital. Markets are currently placing a 84% chance of a 50 basis point rate hike at Thursday's BoE meeting. ING strategists said they expected BoE's decision to have a broadly neutral impact on the pound against the dollar.
"Sterling/dollar moves may be mostly dictated by the FOMC
reaction," wrote ING analyst Francesco Pesole in a note,
referring to the Federal Reserve's rate decision.
Against the euro, ING expects sterling to hold below 88.00
pence until Thursday, "although inflation figures in the euro
zone mean the balance of risk is tilted to the upside for the
pair," wrote Pesole.
DATA IN FOCUS
British grocery inflation hit a record 16.7% in the four
weeks to Jan. 22, dealing another blow to consumers battling an
escalating cost-of-living crisis, industry data showed on
Tuesday.
On a brighter note, a survey showed the British public's
predictions for inflation cooled again in January. The news is
likely to provide comfort that high prices will not become
permanently embedded in expectations as BoE policymakers mull
how far to hike rates in the battle to bring down inflation.
But concerns of a recession remain in focus, with numbers
showing mortgage approvals slumped in December to levels seen
during the global financial crisis, hinting that the housing
market is slowing much faster than the consensus predicted.
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Graphic: World FX rates in 2022 Graphic: Trade-weighted sterling since Brexit vote ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>
(Reporting by Lucy Raitano; Editing by Joice Alves and Mark
Potter)