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Pound Inches Higher after UK Jobs Figures Beat Expectations

LONDON, June 18 (Reuters) - The pound rose slightly on Thursday, recovering from a sharp drop to a two-month low the day before, after British ​employment data came in stronger than expected.

Sterling was last up ‌0.17% at $1.332, after sliding 1% on Wednesday when U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers signalled they could hike interest rates this year.

The euro was up 0.05% against the pound ​at 86.54 pence, suggesting much of sterling's rise against the ​dollar was a bounce from Wednesday's sharp fall.

Economic data on ⁠Thursday showed the UK unemployment rate fell to 4.9% in ​the three months through April, down from 5% previously.

The number of people ​in payrolled employment rose by 2,000 in May, the data showed, while annual wage growth excluding bonuses remained at 3.4%, stronger than the 3.2% economists predicted.

The growth ​in pay will be closely watched by the Bank of England, which ​is widely expected to hold interest rates at 3.75% later on Thursday.

"The fact ‌that ⁠wage growth came in a bit stronger today will certainly interest the hawks on the Monetary Policy Committee, but we think it is unlikely the Bank delivers the same kind of hawkish message as the ​U.S. Fed last ​night," said Luke ⁠Bartholomew, deputy chief economist at Aberdeen.

April's dramatic 100,000 drop in payrolled employees was revised to a still-sharp ​decline of 53,000.

"On the face of it, the latest ​UK ⁠jobs report doesn’t look so bad," said James Smith, developed markets economist at ING.

"But the details still look dovish for the Bank of England. ⁠And ​the report is another reminder that the ​case for higher rates is far from the clear cut."

Reporting by Harry Robertson; Editing by Joe Bavier

Source: Reuters


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