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GBP Snaps 3-Day Winning Streak vs USD, Holds Firm vs EUR

LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - The pound strengthened against the euro and dipped against the dollar on Tuesday as traders positioned for a likely Andy Burnham premiership in Britain and ​digested data from the euro zone and U.S.

Moves were ‌muted, but sterling snapped a three-day run of gains against the dollar and was last down 0.2% at $1.3233.

Against the euro, sterling was firmer, with the single currency ​down a fraction at 86.10 pence, moving back towards last ​week's low of 86.03, its weakest since August 2025.

Data on Tuesday confirmed Britain's economy ⁠grew 0.6% in the first quarter, unchanged from the initial estimate and ​doing little to shift markets.

Investors were instead still digesting Burnham's speech on Monday, ​in which Britain's prime minister-in-waiting pledged radical political change by devolving more power to regions and promoting cooperation over division as part of a 10-year mission to drive what he called "good" growth.

Markets were initially wary of a Burnham ​premiership amid expectations he could pursue higher borrowing and spending.

While reaction to his latest ​remarks has been muted, it has been marginally positive for sterling.

"Sterling's supported by the fact that ‌Andy ⁠Burnham was talking about devolution yesterday, that's not a dangerous topic for him to talk about (for markets)," said Kit Juckes, chief FX strategist at Societe Generale.

"The kind of devolution he wants might ​be expensive so ​we'll have ⁠to see where that goes, but he's done nothing to hurt and so some more sterling ​bears have been squeezed out."

Sterling also drew support ​against the ⁠euro from softer inflation readings from France and several German states, which could reduce the likelihood of the European Central Bank delivering a second rate hike this year.

Markets may get more ⁠direction on ​Wednesday when ECB President Christine Lagarde ​appears on a panel alongside Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, and new Federal ​Reserve chief Kevin Warsh.

Reporting by Alun John. Editing by Mark Potter

Source: Reuters


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