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Sterling Dips but Eyes Weekly Gain as Burnham Nears Power

LONDON, July 17 (Reuters) - The pound slipped on Friday but was on track for its third consecutive weekly rise, with UK assets supported in recent days by ​reports that incoming prime minister Andy Burnham has chosen a centrist to be ‌finance minister.

Sterling was last down 0.2% at $1.345, as it gave back some of its sharp gains on Wednesday and as the safe-haven U.S. dollar found some support from ongoing strikes in ​the Middle East.

Yet it remained set to rise 0.4% this week after ​rallying on Wednesday when newspapers, including the Financial Times, reported ⁠that Burnham was likely to pick Shabana Mahmood as his finance minister over the ​more left-leaning Ed Miliband.

Traders took news of the likely appointment as a sign that ​Burnham, who is set to become leader of the governing Labour Party on Friday and prime minister next Monday, is not planning to ramp up spending as some investors had ​originally feared.

Government bonds rallied along with the pound, which has also been helped ​by a dip in the dollar this week.

"UK political developments have shifted from a headwind to ‌a ⁠tailwind, with an orderly leadership transition and expectations of a fiscally prudent chancellor boosting market confidence," strategists at UBS Wealth Management said in a research note.

The pound also retraced some of its recent rally against the euro on Friday, with ​the common currency ​up 0.15% to ⁠85.03 pence.

Yet the euro was still on track for its fourth straight weekly decline against the pound, with sterling helped ​by greater political certainty and better-than-expected UK growth figures.

However, ING currency ​strategist Francesco ⁠Pesole said the pound looked somewhat over-valued after rising to a 13-month high against the euro.

Pesole said British bond yields could fall, knocking the attractiveness of the pound, ⁠if ​markets scaled back their bets for around 35 ​bps of Bank of England rate hikes this year, which he said looked too high.

Reporting by Harry Robertson Editing by Gareth Jones

Source: Reuters


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