The pound edged up on Friday
after tumbling in US trade following hints from the head of the Bank of England
that it was ready to cut interest rates to stem fallout from Britain’s decision
to quit the European Union.
A week after the unexpected
Brexit vote, Mark Carney sought to reassure anxious investors that Threadneedle
Street would step into financial markets.
“The economic outlook has
deteriorated and some monetary policy easing will likely be required over the
summer,” he said in a speech Thursday in London.
Sterling plunged one percent
Thursday after his comments, ending the day at $1.3314, having broken above
$1.35 earlier in the day.
But on Friday in Tokyo it
rose to $1.3327. The currency slumped to a 31-year-low of $1.3121 at the start
of the week.
However, analysts were
cautious about future movements owing to uncertainty around Britain’s ability
to reach a divorce agreement, while at the same time its ruling Conservative
Party struggles to find a successor to Prime Minister David Cameron when he
steps down in September.
“The pound slightly
recovered today due to rallies on selling, but we can’t find many fundamental
factors to support it,” said Yosuke Hosokawa, head of the FX sales team at
Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank.
“For now, the pound is still
on a downward slope.”
The yen gained ground
against the dollar after tumbling Thursday on speculation the Bank of Japan
will expand its already massive stimulus programme, while the greenback was
also hurt by waning US interest rate hike expectations.
“It’s hard to continue
selling the yen against the dollar as the prospect for a US rate hike is now
uncertain,” Hosokawa said.
Shortly before markets
opened, official data showed spending by Japanese households fell in May while
inflation dropped for a third straight month, dealing another blow to Tokyo’s
war on deflation.
They were the latest in a
string of figures — including an earlier drop in factory output — to raise
concerns about Japan’s prospects.
Also Friday, the Bank of
Japan’s closely watched Tankan survey showed confidence among small firms and
non-manufacturers worsened, while major manufacturers’ sentiment was stuck at
its lowest levels in more than three years ago.
The dollar changed hands at
102.90 yen in Tokyo against 103.23 yen in New York, while the euro was at
$1.1103 and 114.26 yen, compared with $1.1104 and 114.63 yen.
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