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GBP/EUR: British pound dips after fortnight win streak

GBP/USD: Dollar Jumps As Fed Scales Back Rate Cut Rhetoric

The British pound is lower against the euro on Monday.

GBP/EUR was down by 55 pips (-0.49%) to 1.1106 as of 3pm GMT. Last week the exchange rate rose +0.64% for its second weekly gain in a row.

The currency pair slid back from the 3-week high made on Friday to trade back down near the 1.11 handle. On Friday it had gained just +0.04% after reversing almost all of the day’s gains.

GBP: Pound faces selling after win streak

The British pound faced some selling pressure on Monday off the back of a fortnightly gain over the euro. There was no particular news flow to influence it other than bearish traders taking advantage of higher prices to position for potential future Brexit / trade / pandemic related uncertainty.

The Bank of England’s Andrew Bailey was addressing a school in a virtual classroom but his comments were in keeping with previous guidance from the central bank and so non-market moving.

Bailey said: “We are seeing the economy come back now somewhat, because obviously the restrictions are beginning to be lifted… But there’s a long way to go, we are very worried about jobs, as are a lot of people.”

There was also a sight development on the British government’s policy toward the pandemic. Prime Minister Johnson commented “We do think masks have a great deal of value in confined spaces.” So it seems likely masks could be mandatory in British shops quite soon.

EUR: Euro gains at start of a big week

The euro started the week on a firm footing, also making some choppy headway over the US dollar. It is a big week for events that could create movement in the currency; first the European Central Bank (ECB) meeting on Thursday and second the EU Summit on Friday.

The euro did get a boost on Monday following some relatively bullish comments from French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, who has calculated that “consumption activity is just 5% lower than normal.” Given the circumstances that would be very good if substantiated.

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