Sterling slips after surprise UK inflation fall

Reuters

Published Mar 24, 2021 09:44

By Joice Alves

LONDON (Reuters) - Sterling slipped to its lowest against the dollar in almost seven weeks on Wednesday after data showed a surprise decline in inflation in Britain in February.

The pound was down 0.3% to $1.3718 at 0940 GMT, after falling to its lowest since Feb. 5 of $1.3675 in earlier London trading.

Versus the euro, it was 0.1% lower at 86.28 pence, after touching its lowest since March 5 of 86.45 pence.

British consumer price inflation unexpectedly fell to 0.4% in February from 0.7% in January, reflecting the biggest annual drop in clothing prices since 2009. A Reuters poll forecast it to edge up to 0.8%.

British two-year government bond yields hit a one-month low and briefly dipped below zero when trading started after the release of weak inflation data.

"Weaker-than-expected UK CPI data should serve as a reminder that reflation is still in the early stages in the UK," said Jane Foley, head of FX strategy at Rabobank. "A lot of good news has been baked into the price of GBP since the start of the year and data such as this suggest that optimism may be a little too much, too soon".

Earlier this year, bets that Britain's rapid vaccination drive would lead to a faster reopening of an economy propelled the pound above $1.42 in February.