Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Brexit delay reports give pound a boost

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STERLING was on the rise yesterday following growing speculatio­n that Brexit will be delayed beyond the current March 29 exit date.

Currency traders pushed the currency up 0.6 per cent to 1.282 US dollars at the London market close, its highest level since November.

Versus the euro, sterling was also up 0.6 per cent, trading at 1.117.

The pound’s ascent came despite more worrying signs that Britain’s economic growth is slowing further.

Over the three months to November, GDP rose 0.3 per cent compared with the previous quarter, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

Growth of 0.4 per cent was recorded in the three months to October.

The ONS said the largest downward drag came from a fall in motor vehicle production of 4.3 per cent amid factory shutdowns, weaker consumer demand for cars and declining diesel sales.

Meanwhile, the FTSE 100 shed 24.69 points, or 0.36 per cent, to close at 6,918.18.

Connor Campbell, analyst at SpreadEx, said: “What had been shaping up to be a decent little session unravelled as Friday went on, a negative start from the Dow Jones ensuring the European indices couldn’t get back their initial growth.

“The ongoing government shutdown in the US, as well as Starbucks-

24 Points fall on the FTSE 100 index in

London last night

refreshed concerns surroundin­g the Chinese economy, contribute­d.”

On the lower tiers, shares in Flybe nosedived after Virgin Atlantic and Stobart Group swooped on the regional airline in a £2.2 million deal.

The firm’s stock tanked 77.1 per cent, or 12.63p, to 3.75p at the close.

Shares in Debenhams were also in freefall following the removal of the retailer’s chairman and chief executive by Mike Ashley a day earlier.

The retail tycoon, who owns just under 30 per cent of the department store chain through Sports Direct, teamed up with fellow shareholde­r Landmark to eject Sir Ian Cheshire and Sergio Bucher from the board.

Following the Debenhams annual meeting on Thursday, Mr Cheshire stepped down as chairman immediatel­y, but Mr Bucher will stay on as chief executive, although not as a director.

Shares tumbled 18.9 per cent, or 0.91p, to 3.9p.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Taylor Wimpey up 7.15p at 156.05p, Persimmon up 92p at 2,203p, Barratt Developmen­ts up 14.2p at 503.4p and IAG up 15.2p at 610p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were NMC Health down 148p at 2,782p, Smurfit Kappa down 102p at 2,142p, Astrazenec­a down 211p at 5,712p and Melrose down 5.9p at 170.8p.

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