Sterling drops, UK stocks bounce after BoE holds rates

By Harry Robertson

LONDON (Reuters) -The pound fell to its lowest since March and British stocks outperformed the wider market after the Bank of England held interest rates steady on Thursday, following a cooler-than-expected inflation print the previous day.

Sterling was last down 0.53% at $1.2278 at 1345 GMT, after touching its lowest since late March at $1.2231 following the decision. It traded around 0.4% lower at $1.23 before the outcome of the BoE’s policy meeting.

Britain’s FTSE 100 stock index pared its earlier losses and was last down 0.19%, having briefly moved into the green, boosted by rate-sensitive real estate and homebuilder stocks. The index traded 0.7% lower before the decision.

The mid-cap FTSE 250 index also pared losses and was last 0.2% lower. Both gauges outperformed the pan-European STOXX 600, which was down around 1.1%.

The BoE’s Monetary Policy Committee voted by a narrow margin of 5-4 to keep its benchmark rate at 5.25%.

The decision came a day after data showed British inflation slowed more than expected in August, coming in at 6.7% year-on-year, down from 6.8% in July. Economists had expected a rise to 7%.

“There are increasing signs of some impact of tighter monetary policy on the labour market and on momentum in the real economy more generally,” the MPC said in a statement.

Nick Rees, FX market analyst at Monex Europe, said the pound was under pressure after the U.S. Federal Reserve held interest rates on Wednesday but signalled that it was likely to leave them on hold for longer than markets expected.

“The pound has continued to slump again today as markets react to the BoE’s decision to hold in an environment where the Fed has signalled a much-higher-for-far-longer path,” he said.

The euro was last 0.52% higher against the pound at 86.8 pence. It traded around 86.65 pence before the BoE’s decision, up roughly 0.3%.

Pricing in derivatives markets showed traders’ average bet was that BoE rates would rise to 5.37% by early 2024, down from around 5.42% before the decision.

“The question now is firmly centred on whether this pause will remain or if another rate rise will be needed in November, only time and further economic data will tell,” Frances Haque, UK chief economist at Santander, said.

The yield on Britain’s benchmark 10-year bond wavered after the decision and was last roughly where it was before the BoE’s statement, up 9 bps at 4.302%.

(Reporting by Harry Robertson, Stefano Rebaudo and Danilo Masoni; editing by Dhara Ranasinghe, Amanda Cooper and Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

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