Khaleej Times

Brexit deal pushes sterling to 6-month high, stocks up

- Abhinav Ramnarayan

london — A breakthrou­gh in Brexit negotiatio­ns pushed sterling to a six-month high against the euro on Friday and added momentum to an upswing in world stocks underpinne­d by strong economic news from China and Japan.

Britain and the European Union struck a deal on Friday to move on to talk about trade and a transition period after they agreed the outline of their divorce.

Sterling was up nearly half a per cent against the euro to hit a sixmonth high and stock indices across the continent opened sharply up on the news.

“While agreeing a divorce bill has little economic significan­ce for the price of sterling, the political significan­ce of progress in Brexit talks is quite profound,” said Viraj Patel, an FX strategist for ING.

“It reduces the tail risk of a ‘no deal’ scenario and a complete breakdown in negotiatio­ns.”

Even Britain’s FTSE 100 Index, which normally falls when sterling rises because of high number of dollar earners on the list, edged higher.

But it lagged the pan-European share index, which surged 0.9 per cent in early trade on Friday, pushing the MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, up 0.2 per cent.

European banking shares were amongst the biggest gainers after financial regulators reached a long-sought deal on Thursday to harmonise global banking rules, but said the rules would take effect in 2022, later than

While agreeing a [Brexit] divorce bill has little economic significan­ce for the price of sterling, the political significan­ce of progress in Brexit talks is quite profound Viraj Patel, FX strategist at ING previous expectatio­ns for 2019. While sterling’s rise against the euro was most eye-catching, it also edged up against a strengthen­ing dollar.

The dollar rose 0.2 per cent against a trade-weighted basket of its rivals on Friday and was on track for its biggest weekly rise in nearly six weeks after a potential government shutdown this weekend was averted.

US non-farm payroll numbers are due out later today will be closely watched ahead of next week’s Federal Reserve meeting, at which a third interest rate hike of the year is largely expected.

Earlier on Friday, Asian shares rallied for a second session in a row as economic news from China and Japan beat all expectatio­ns.

Beijing reported exports surged 12.3 per cent in November from a year earlier, more than double the forecast, while imports climbed almost 18 per cent.

Iron ore and copper imports enjoyed a stellar rebound, which could help stem a recent pullback in commodity prices.

Japan’s Nikkei led the way as the yen eased on the dollar, rising 1.1 per cent on top of Thursday’s 1.45 per cent bounce to be almost back where it started the week.

Revised data showed Japan’s economy growing twice as fast as first thought as business spending jumped. — Reuters

 ?? — AP ?? The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, rose 0.2 per cent on Friday.
— AP The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, rose 0.2 per cent on Friday.

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