- Pound falls as Middle East conflict drives flows to dollars
- BoE rate expectations shift from cuts to potential hike
- UK gilts hit hardest among major bond markets
LONDON, March 12 (Reuters) - The pound headed for a third daily loss against the dollar on Thursday, as concern about a lasting rise in energy prices and nervousness about the war in the Middle East drove investors into the dollar.
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey was due to speak later on Thursday, a week before the central bank's rate-setting meeting.
As oil and natural gas prices have surged, so have investor expectations for inflation. Sterling, which has fallen by just 0.7% since the outbreak of the war on February 28, is one of the better-performing currencies among those belonging to economies that rely heavily on imported energy.
The euro and the Korean won have lost 2% to 3%, while the Indian rupee and Japanese yen have lost more than 1.5% each.
Highlighting the heavier fire for the single European currency is the euro's 1.3% drop against the pound since the start of the conflict.
The pound was last down 0.2% on the day against the dollar at $1.3386 and weakened against the euro, which rose 0.1% to 86.3 pence.
RATE EXPECTATIONS SHIFT WILDLY
Typically, higher bond yields and the prospect of higher interest rates tend to support currencies, which may have cushioned the pound, to an extent.
Money markets have swung wildly in the last two weeks. Traders' assumption at the end of February was for the Bank of England to deliver two interest-rate cuts this year. That has now flipped to a near-50% chance for one hike by December.
The European Central Bank could raise rates twice this year, based on swaps market pricing, while the Federal Reserve looks less likely to deliver the two cuts markets had widely expected previously.
"The aggressive repricing of BoE rate-cut expectations is providing some support to sterling," City Index strategist Fiona Cincotta said.
"For now, the focus will remain on geopolitical developments and concerns over the war-driven surge in energy prices and inflationary pressures," she said.
As investors have increasingly leaned towards a number of major central banks raising rates rather than cutting them, or leaving them on hold, they have sold short-dated bonds, which tend to benefit from stable, or falling, rates.
British gilts have been the hardest hit among the big bond markets, with 2-year gilt yields rising 50 basis points since the start of the war, compared with a roughly 38-bp rise in Italian yields, a 30-bp rise in Australian yields and just a 21-bp increase in 2-year Treasury yields.
Reporting by Amanda Cooper; Editing by Alex Richardson
Source: Reuters