FOREX-Dollar ticks up, pounds falls from 1-1/2 year high

Published 17/12/2019, 16:41
© Reuters.  FOREX-Dollar ticks up, pounds falls from 1-1/2 year high
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(New throughout; updates prices, market activity and comments;

new byline, changes dateline, previous LONDON/TOKYO)

By Kate Duguid

NEW YORK, Dec 17 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar rose modestly

on Tuesday, lifted by a dramatic slide in the pound after

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson put a no-deal exit from the

European Union back on the table.

Britain on Tuesday set a hard deadline of December 2020 to

reach a new trade deal with the EU, trying to pressure Brussels

to move more quickly to seal an accord. Johnson will use his

control of parliament to outlaw any extention of the Brexit

transition period beyond 2020. It was his boldest move since

winning a large majority in last Thursday's election, and it

spooked financial markets. The pound GBP= had fallen 1.23% to $1.317 in North

American trade, and was down 2.55% from Friday when it hit its

highest since May 2018 in the wake of Johnson's electoral

victory.

"Sterling-negative Brexit uncertainty returned to the

forefront," said Joe Manimbo, senior market analyst at Western

Union Business Solutions.

The euro rose against the pound EURGBP= , last up 1.36% to

trade at 0.847 pence, its strength bolstering it against the

U.S. dollar as well EUR= .

"The move appears to be the knee-jerk variety for the euro

as Brexit uncertainty would only complicate Europe's already

challenging economic backdrop. A better test of euro sentiment

arrives Wednesday with the final reading of euro zone inflation

for November which is forecast to go unrevised at a low 1%,

compared to the ECB's near 2% bullseye," said Manimbo.

The dollar index .DXY was slightly higher, up 0.13% to

97.147, driven by the fall in the pound as well as a fall in the

Australian dollar AUD= .

The Aussie fell to a weekly low on Tuesday after the central

bank opened the door to another cut in interest rates as early

as February. The trade-linked currency also weakened as euphoria

from the U.S.-China trade agreement faded. It was last down

0.51% at 0.685 U.S. dollars to the Aussie. The "phase one" trade deal between Washington and Beijing,

announced on Friday after more than 2-1/2 years of volatile

negotiations, will reduce U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods in

exchange for increased Chinese purchases of some U.S. goods.

Fitch ratings agency said the deal eased U.S.-China tensions

but that renewed escalation remains a significant risk, with the

issue of technology posing an obstacle to full resolution.

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