The Pak Banker

Pound falls on report of planning new Brexit deadline

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TOKYO: The British pound fell on Tuesday after reports UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson was seeking a hard line on Britain's transition period after Brexit, effectivel­y creating a new cliff in its negotiatio­ns with Brussels. Sterling dropped as much as 0.7% to $1.3236, as its Friday's 1-1/2-year peak of $1.3516 looked increasing­ly like a near-term peak following the massive relief rally after last week's UK election.

Johnson's revised Withdrawal Agreement Bill would require the United Kingdom to have arrangemen­ts to leave the European Union be in place by Dec. 31 next year, UK broadcaste­r ITV reported. The move dashes hopes Johnson would take a flexible approach to the end-2020 deadline for a trade deal with the EU after Britain leaves the bloc, which now looks almost certain to happen on Jan. 31 following the landslide Conservati­ve election win.

"Common sense suggests that crafting a trade deal would take at least more than a year, so markets had assumed that the transition period will be extended," said Masafumi Yamamoto, chief currency strategist at Mizuho Securities. "It seems like the big majority Johnson won is enabling him to take a hard line approach, which the market doesn't like so much... Considerin­g the UK economy looks set to deteriorat­e as people and companies start to leave the country because of Brexit, sterling's short-covering rally is over," he added.

Other major currencies saw limited moves as investors sought more details on an interim trade deal the United States and China struck last week. The deal has broadly capped safehaven currencies, such as the yen, and supported risk-sensitive currencies. Against the yen, the dollar traded at 109.56 yen, up 0.05% from late U.S. levels, having gained 0.15% to edge near six-month high of 109.73 hit on Dec. 2.

The euro stood at $1.1147, maintainin­g its uptrend from its seven-week low of $1.1098 touched on Nov. 29. The deal, announced on Friday after more than two-and-a-half years of volatile negotiatio­ns between Washington and Beijing, will reduce some U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods in exchange for increased Chinese purchases of some U.S. goods.

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