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Pound slumps to 6-month low against rallying Dollar

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The British pound Sterling on Tuesday, May 29, dropped to a six-month low against a rallying dollar, while it held its own against a euro dragged down by concerns about a deepening political crisis in Italy.
Sterling has slumped against the dollar since mid-April as expectations of a Bank of England interest rate rise recede, the economy shows signs of weakness and worries about whether Britain can secure the Brexit deal it wants reemerge.
Against the dollar, the pound slid as much as 0.7 percent to $1.3205, its weakest since mid-November. The British currency, previously one of the best performers in 2018, is now down more than 2 percent versus the dollar so far this year.
“We can ascribe a lot of it (pound weakness) to the U.S. dollar but I think sterling has been on the back foot independently,” said Jane Foley, an FX strategist at Rabobank, citing relatively downbeat UK retail sales and inflation data published last week.
“There is nothing in there to restore confidence in the BoE’s ability to raise rates.”
David Madden, an analyst at CMC Markets, said the pound remained “in its downward trend” and pointed to $1.32 as a key target.
Versus the euro, sterling has performed much better, and on Tuesday traded flat at 87.31 pence per euro.
Worries about divisions within the British government about whether it wants to remain in a customs union with Europe after Brexit have hit sentiment towards the pound ahead of crucial EU summit in June.
 
However, the euro’s rapid descent – caused by investors buying into dollars and concerns about political uncertainty in Italy – have underpinned the pound and it remains up versus the single currency in 2018.

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