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Sterling Steady as US-Iran Tensions Flare Up again

LONDON, July 8 (Reuters) - The pound held steady on Wednesday as U.S. President Donald Trump said that an interim agreement to end the war with ​Iran was "over" after Tehran carried out new attacks on U.S. bases in ‌the Gulf.

Brent crude futures jumped after Trump's comments, made before a NATO summit in Turkey, and were last up 5.61% to $78.36 a barrel.

The reaction in currency markets was ​relatively muted, with the U.S. dollar index last little changed on ​the day.

Sterling was largely flat at $1.3351, having hit its highest ⁠level since June 17 against the greenback on Tuesday.

Against the euro, the ​pound was a touch weaker on the day at 85.47 pence. That left ​sterling just shy of recent 13-month highs against the euro.

Domestic issues were also in focus, with former Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham widely expected to succeed Keir Starmer as ​prime minister later this month.

"We still don't know an awful lot about ​the policies of Burnham, assuming that he is the next Prime Minister," Jane Foley, ‌head of ⁠FX strategy at Rabobank, said.

"And we certainly don't know who his cabinet picks are going to be," she added.

Markets are especially wary of what a new government could mean for Britain's stretched finances and are waiting to ​see who the ​next finance minister ⁠will be. Online betting platform Polymarket was last indicating a 51% chance of left-leaning former energy minister Ed Miliband ​taking on the role.

"Who is going to be Chancellor is ​going ⁠to give signals to the market as to whether or not we are going to see a chancellor that will try and tighten those purse strings ⁠or not," ​Foley said.

"And I think that could really ​set the tone for sterling through the summer and into the autumn."

Reporting by Sophie Kiderlin, editing by Andrew Heavens

Source: Reuters


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