"We still think the BoE will hike by 25bp on 23 March, but the market’s pricing for an additional 50bp of tightening after that seems too aggressive," ING strategist Francesco Pesole said. "EUR/GBP may continue to find support beyond the 0.8900 level for now as the euro may gain more momentum in the crosses and unstable risk sentiment should hit GBP harder," he said. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Graphic: World FX rates in 2022 Graphic: Trade-weighted sterling since Brexit vote ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Reporting by Amanda Cooper; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
By Amanda Cooper
LONDON, March 3 (Reuters) - The pound rose on Friday,
boosted by data that showed business activity expanded at its
fastest pace in eight months in February, which added to the
view among investors that UK rates will continue to rise beyond
March.
The final version of the S&P Global/CIPS UK services
Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) increased to 53.5 last month,
up from 48.7 in January, the strongest rate of growth since June
last year. Any reading above 50 represents an expansion.
S&P Global said the recovery in business activity in the
services sector, which grew for the first time since August, was
partly linked to expectations of interest rates peaking.
Sterling rose 0.4% against the dollar to $1.199 and
gained 0.3% versus the euro to trade at 88.45 pence.
The pound has risen by almost 1% this week, supported by a
shift up in expectations for UK rates, and in part by Britain
reaching an agreement with the European Union on post-Brexit
trading rules for Northern Ireland.
Financial markets expect the Bank of England's main rate to
top out at 4.75% in August, up from 4.0% now and up from
expectations for a peak around 4.0% a month ago. BoE chief economist Huw Pill on Thursday said Britain's
economy is showing slightly more momentum than expected and pay
growth is proving a bit faster than the central bank forecast
last month, helping underpin expectations that UK rates won't
peak quite yet.
"Yesterday Bank of England chief economist Huw Pill said
that inflation risks in the UK economy continue to remain tilted
to the upside, and supported the idea that rates are likely to
have to continue to rise," CMC Markets chief strategist Michael
Hewson said.
"His tone was in contrast to Governor Andrew Bailey the day
before who would have markets believe that the probability of
another rate hike in a couple of weeks’ time should not be taken
for granted," he added.
That said, a series of inflation readings across the euro
zone this week has prompted a number of large investment banks
to increase their forecasts for the peak in European Central
Bank rates, which poses a risk to sterling's yield advantage.
Ten-year gilts currently yield around 3.87%, and
have risen by 80 basis points in the last four weeks, compared
with benchmark 10-year German Bunds , which have
risen by 53 bps in that time and yield around 2.72%.
But ECB policymakers have sounded a far more hawkish tone
than the BoE's, meaning that over the longer term, investors may
lean more towards the euro.
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