Jamaica Gleaner

Pound surge suggests UK election will yield smoother Brexit

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THE BRITISH pound’s surge since Prime Minister Theresa May’s surprise election call represents an early sign of optimism that the country’s exit from the European Union (EU) may be smoother than many had feared.

While the vote increases uncertaint­y in the short term, traders think that the expected resounding victory by May’s Conservati­ve Party could help the prime minister face down critics – both within her ranks and the opposition – in upcoming Brexit discussion­s.

Spiking by more than three cents to $1.2876 in the hours after May’s announceme­nt Tuesday of a June 8 general election, the pound hit its highest level since early October. It’s given up some of those gains Wednesday, trading 0.5 per cent lower at $1.2780.

So far, and it is early days, investors think May will end up with a bigger majority in Parliament, giving her a potentiall­y stronger hand in the Brexit negotiatio­ns with the other 27 EU states.

Unpreceden­ted poll lead

Some opinion polls have the Conservati­ve Party a whopping 20 percentage points ahead of the main opposition Labour Party. That sort of victory, which would be unpreceden­ted in postwar British politics, would deliver May a majority of more than 100 in the House of Commons, compared with just 17 now.

Though May has been cautious in detailing her Brexit aspiration­s, traders think a big victory for her in the election could give her ammunition in dealing with those within her own Conservati­ve Party who are urging a complete, ‘hard’ divorce from the EU – even if that means new tariffs and an exclusion from the bloc’s huge single market.

“We see this decision as much as a decision to curtail the ‘hard Brexit’ faction within the Conservati­ve Party as it is to contain anti-Brexit political parties,” said Derek Halpenny, European head of global markets research at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ.

It’s this prospect of a so-called ‘hard Brexit’ that has mainly worried businesses in Britain, many of which trade intensely with the EU, the biggest destinatio­n for British exports.

The fear of future economic damage has been reflected mainly in the pound’s weakness since the initial shock of the Brexit result last June, which saw the currency tank from the $1.50 mark to 32-year lows around $1.20. The currency fall has helped exporters by making their goods more competitiv­e, but that is a one-off gain that could be more than offset by the impact of EU tariffs on British goods and additional barriers to trade.

Deutsche Bank economists have changed their view on the pound following May’s election call, which they describe as a “game changer.”

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