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Recession confirmed: Pound sterling extends falls against euro and dollar

Published 15/02/2024, 07:49
Recession Confirmed: {{0|Pound Sterling}} Extends Falls Against Euro and Dollar

PoundSterlingLIVE - The British Pound dropped to fresh lows for the week after it was confirmed the UK fell into recession in the second half of 2023.

The Pound to Euro exchange rate fell to 1.17 from 1.1710 in the minutes after the ONS said the UK economy shrank 0.3% quarter-on-quarter in the final quarter of 2023, which makes for two consecutive quarters of contraction owing to Q3's shrinkage.

The development was expected; however, the figure was worse than the -0.1% reading the market expected, which explains why the Pound to Dollar rate dipped to 1.2558 from 1.2566.

The word recession carries disappointing connotations, but we would expect the FX impact to be relatively limited owing to the backwards-looking nature of these figures: the market is more interested in what happened in January (as per Wednesday's inflation release) and February (that's why next week's PMI survey will be watched closely).

Survey data for January suggests the economy is recovering, which should underpin the Pound.

"Weak UK GDP data suggests some potential for profit-taking in long GBP positions. That said, we would favour buying GBP on dips vs. the EUR and look for a move in EUR/GBP to 0.84 in the latter part of this year," says Jane Foley, Senior FX Strategist at Rabobank.

These quarterly growth data are just the latest to confirm that 2023 was a poor year for the UK, with GDP estimated to have increased by just 0.1% in the year compared with 2022.

There were falls in all three main sectors in the latest quarter, with declines of 0.2% in services, 1.0% in production, and 1.3% in construction output. There was a fall in the volume of net trade, household spending and government consumption in Q4.

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"With inflation lower than expected this week, the news the UK is in recession will lead to growing pressure for the Bank of England to cut interest rates," says Nicholas Hyett, Investment Analyst, Wealth Club.

Market expectations for a rate cut rose sharply following Wednesday's release of inflation data for January, with the market now seeing the odds of a June rate cut at above 75%, from less than 50% ahead of the inflation reading.

The Pound has fallen in response to this shift in expectations and near-term trends are likely to be soft.

An original version of this article can be viewed at Pound Sterling Live

Latest comments

They wont do it yet they follow blindly what fed is doing so they can blame on the workd exonomy if something goes wrong lol its always been like that markets are wrong again it wont be rate cuts unless some heavy economical catastrophe will show on a horizon which tbh already can be seen by many but not by banks because it is a cycle which somehow profits those institutions
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