The statement [of the UK Central Bank] did not give any clear signals as to the future path of UK interest rates and as such came as a disappointment to sterling bulls given the high probability that was attached to a follow-up rate rise in the first quarter of 2007.Read More: BoE disappoints sterling bulls
UK Central Bank Raises Rates
Thursday, November 9, 2006
The Pound has been idling near a multi-year high against the USD for
several months now, but it can’t seem to break through the psychological
resistance of $1.90. Against that backdrop, the Central Bank of the UK
raised interest rates this week by 25 basis points, to 5%. This leaves
UK rates potentially one rate hike away from parity with American rates,
which seem more likely to be lowered than raised, given current
circumstances. Narrowing interest rate differentials may remove the
last barrier that has stood in the way of a broad-based USD decline.
Perhaps, risk-averse investors will begin shifting some of their capital
out of the US, and into UK and Europe, which is also in the midst of
raising rates. The Financial Times reports:
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British Pound
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