The Pound’s failure to make any additional headway shouldn’t come as a surprise. First of all, the Pound is not a safe haven currency. That means that the only chance it has to rise is when risk is “on.” Unfortunately, the Pound also scores pretty low in this regard. Annual GDP growth is currently a pathetic .5%, and is projected at only 1.8% for the entire year. Inflation is high, and both the trade balance and the current account balance are in deficit. Deficit spending has caused a surge in government debt, and there is a possibility that the UK could lose its AAA credit rating.
Investors might be  willing to overlook all  of this if interest rates were at an attractive  level. Alas, at .5%,  the Bank of England’s (BOE) benchmark rate is among  the lowest in the  world. Moreover, it isn’t expected to begin hiking  rates for many  months, and even then, the pace will be slow. Simply, the  economy is  too fragile to support a serious tightening of monetary  policy.  Interest rate futures reflect a consensus expectation that rates  will  be only 75 basis points higher one year from now.
If  that’s the case, why hasn’t the Pound  crashed entirely? To be fair, the  Pound is losing groroundround against  both the euro and the franc, the  former of which has it bested in  economic grounds while the latter is  cashing in on its status as a safe  haven currency. On the other hand,  the Pound is still up for the year  against the US dollar and Japanese  Yen, both of which are also safe  haven currencies.
It could be  the case that the Pound is  simply not the ugliest currency, since all of  the charges that can be  leveled against it can similarly be leveled  against the dollar.  Head-to-head, it’s actually quite possible that the  Pound still wins,  if only because its interest rates are slightly higher  than the US. Or,  it could be the case that investors still believe the  BOE will come  around and begin hiking rates. After all, at the beginning  of the year (when by no coincidence, the Pound was still rising),  expectations  were that the BOE would have already hiked twice by this  time, bringing  the benchmark to a level that would make the Pound  attractive to carry  traders. While the BOE hasn’t followed through,  carry traders may be  sticking around, since the opportunity cost of  holding the Pound is  basically nil.
As for whether the Pound correction (that I first observed last month)   will continue, that depends entirely on the BOE. Unfortunately, there  is  very little reason to believe that the UK economy will suddenly pick   up, and hence very little reason to expect the BOE to suddenly  tighten.  At some point, earning .5% interest on Pounds will become  unattractive  to investors. Until that day comes, that might stick with  the Pound out  of sheer inertia. While the Pound may hold its value for  this reason, I  don’t think it has any hope of appreciating further this  year.
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