UPDATE 6-Pound soars as Johnson scores landslide British election win

Published 13/12/2019, 07:47
UPDATE 6-Pound soars as Johnson scores landslide British election win
UK100
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* Markets see Johnson win as meaning orderly Brexit

* Sterling back at July 2016 levels vs euro

* Rallies more than 2% vs dollar, highest since May 2018

* Sentiment behind the pound for now, say analysts

* Graphic: Trade-weighted sterling since Brexit vote http://tmsnrt.rs/2hwV9Hv

(Updates prices, adds quotes)

By Tommy Wilkes

LONDON, Dec 13 (Reuters) - The pound surged more than 2% on

Thursday as Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Conservative Party

won a resounding election victory that markets believe makes an

orderly British exit from the European Union all but certain.

Sterling reached a 19-month high versus the dollar and its

strongest levels against the euro since shortly after the 2016

Brexit referendum.

Its jump - as much as 2.5% - versus the dollar put it on

course for its biggest one-day gain in nearly three years, a

remarkable gain for a currency that has become extremely

volatile since the referendum.

Chastened by 3-1/2 years of political instability in

Britain, investors seized on the expected Conservative

landslide, believing it will enable Johnson to deliver Brexit

on Jan. 31.

That would end immediate fears about the United Kingdom

crashing out of the EU.

"Just as Boris Johnson was desperately seeking his majority,

this result would give the markets their ultimate wish:

clarity," said Dean Turner, Economist at UBS Wealth Management.

Johnson's Conservatives were on course to win a comfortable

majority of more than 70 seats in the 650-seat parliament in

what could be the biggest Conservative national election win

since Margaret Thatcher's 1987 triumph. The Conservatives claimed a string of Leave-supporting seats

from Labour in the opposition party's heartlands of Wales and

northern England, results showed. The pound rocketed 2.5% higher to $1.3516 GBP=D3 - its

highest since May 2018 - in the immediate aftermath of the exit

polls. It later settled at $1.3472, up 2.3% on the day.

Against the euro, sterling rose as high as 82.80 pence

EURGBP=D3 , up more than 2% on the day, leaving the pound at

levels last seen in July 2016, shortly after the Brexit

referendum that hammered the currency. The pound traded around

76 pence per euro before the June 2016 Brexit vote.

"Markets will start focusing on the longer-term outlook of

what a future trade relationship with the EU will look like and

the pound's gains will be capped in the $1.35-$1.37 area," said

Joel Kruger, a currency strategist at LMAX Exchange.

Johnson faces the daunting task of negotiating a trade

agreement with the EU, possibly in just 11 months, while also

negotiating another trade deal with U.S. President Donald Trump.

The outcome of the negotiations will shape the future of

Britain's economy. After Jan. 31, Britain will enter a

transition period during which it will negotiate a new

relationship with the remaining 27 EU states.

Peter Kinsella, global Head of FX strategy at UBP said the

pound's gains was a "relief rally" that the Labour Party under

Jeremy Corbyn was unlikely to win and reflected the size of the

majority the Conservatives looked set to claim.

FTSE 100 futures FFIc1 edged 0.2% higher. The

exporter-heavy FTSE 100 often weakens when sterling rallies.

Corbyn's nationalisation plans have weighed on UK domestic

stocks, and energy and transport shares were tipped to climb

when the stock exchange opens on Friday.

Yields on British government bonds are set to rise as

investors buy into riskier assets like stocks.

Sterling traders at banks and investment firms worked

through the night, with the bulk of parliamentary seats declared

before 0500 GMT.

Broader global markets gained on Friday, boosted by both the

likely UK election result and reports a last-gasp trade deal had

averted new U.S. tariffs on China. NOT DONE

Political uncertainty has dogged the performance of British

assets and the pound since the referendum as investors fretted

about the damage a departure from the EU would cause the UK

economy.

Markets' enthusiasm for a Conservative victory under Johnson

contrasts with the summer, when sterling slumped as investors

worried Britain was headed for a disorderly and economically

damaging no-deal Brexit under his leadership.

But Johnson subsequently secured a new agreement with

Brussels and then called a snap election after accusing

parliament of frustrating his plans.

He fought the election under the slogan of "Get Brexit

Done", promising to end the deadlock.

The opposition Labour Party promised the public a second

Brexit referendum.

But Brexit is far from over and though expected price swings

in the pound over the next week have fallen sharply after the

election outcome, they remain elevated compared to other

currencies, signalling concerns about the economy's outlook

remained.

"However, Brexit isn't yet really 'done', and attention will

quickly turn to the future trade relationship. This phase looks

set to be every bit as difficult as the last, with just over 12

months until the transition period ends on 31 December 2020,"

said UBS Wealth's economist Turner.

Euro vs British pound https://tmsnrt.rs/35h0hoL

Sterling vs U.S. dollar https://tmsnrt.rs/2PDBrc5

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