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The pound slipped slightly this morning but held close to six-week highs it touched on the previous day after news that stalled Brexit negotiations were due to resume.
Sterling rose by as much as 1.7% versus the dollar on Wednesday after the European Union’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier said that an EU-UK deal was “within reach”, extending gains on news that trade talks would restart after halting abruptly last week.
The pound reacted well to this new development, and while we’ve been here before on the optimism front, there is the distinct prospect that a pathway to some form of agreement is opening up.
Britain left the EU in January and is currently in a status-quo transition period which ends on Dec. 31. Failure to strike a trade deal would mean commerce then being conducted on World Trade Organization rules that involve some tariffs and quotas.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said last week that the trade talks were over and told businesses to get ready for a no-deal outcome – comments that caused sterling to fall initially but they were soon dismissed by market participants as brinkmanship.
Britain has Europe’s highest death toll from the virus and new infections are rising rapidly. More regional lockdowns have been introduced and the country’s main furlough scheme is due to end on Oct. 31.
Intensified trade talks between Britain and the EU will resume on Thursday afternoon.
GBP/EUR 1.1050 GBP/USD 1.3100 GBP/AED 4.8090
GBP/AUD 1.8442 GBP/CHF 1.1879 GBP/CAD 1.7216
GBP/NZD 1.96620 EUR/USD 1.1832 GBP/ZAR 21.263