The National - News

BREXIT DEAL HOPES COOL AS BRIEF STERLING RALLY ENDS

▶ Analysts warn that the pound will remain unstable should uncertaint­y over separation from EU continue

- JAMIE PRENTIS London

Uncertaint­y over the British currency continued on Thursday as it slipped after the European Union’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier toned down expectatio­ns regarding a Brexit deal.

A surprise rally against the dollar on Wednesday petered out as Mr Barnier appeared to walk back the optimistic language on a deal he had used at a press conference in Berlin.

Shortly after Mr Barnier’s comments on Wednesday the pound rose 1.2 per cent against the dollar to $1.30 and to 1.11 against the euro. On Thursday it slipped back to $1.29.

Experts cautioned against making long-term prediction­s based on the events of the past 24 hours and said the rise and fall of the currency showed how unstable the pound was.

“The pound is pretty volatile and it’s a little bit of a fool’s game predicting its movements. We have to be a bit careful of making prediction­s over events that are inherently volatile,” Laith Khalaf, senior analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, told The National.

“It’s extremely difficult to predict financial outcomes from political events, that is a lesson the EU referendum taught us. Most people didn’t predict the UK would leave, for instance,” he added.

“We are ready … to propose a partnershi­p like there has never been before with any other third country,” Mr Barnier said in Berlin alongside German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas on Wednesday.

This could potentiall­y include “an ambitious free-trade agreement” as well as security and foreign policy co-operation. He did, however, warn against anything that could damage the EU single market. “We respect Britain’s red lines scrupulous­ly. In return, they must respect that is what we are,” he said. “Single market means single market … There is no single market a la carte.”

Despite these comments, on Thursday Mr Barnier told a German radio station that the EU was also preparing for a “no-deal” Brexit.

With only seven months to go until the UK supposedly leaves the EU, talks between Brussels and London on the exit terms have spluttered along.

For September as a whole, the currency is heading for a fifth monthly loss, having been hurt by worries over a lack of a Brexit deal and scaled back expectatio­ns for Bank of England interest-rate increases.

The UK’s Brexit secretary Dominic Raab told a House of Lords committee this week that he was “confident a deal is within our sights”.

“We’re bringing ambition, pragmatism, energy and if, and I expect it will be, and if it is matched, we get a deal,” he said.

The UK’s ruling conservati­ve party has been riven by divisions over Brexit policy, leading to a number of high-profile resignatio­ns from the cabinet. Following discussion­s at Chequers last month, Prime inister Theresa May has sought out a “soft Brexit”, whereby the UK would still have close links to the EU.

Neil Wilson, chief analyst as Markets.com, said there remained a “degree of scepticism” with no concrete deal yet agreed, according to Reuters.

There have been fears of a nodeal Brexit and last week the British Chancellor, or finance minister, Phillip Hammond warned of the “fiscal consequenc­es” if such an event were to happen.

 ?? AP ?? Michel Barnier and Heiko Mass in Berlin on Wednesday
AP Michel Barnier and Heiko Mass in Berlin on Wednesday

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