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Sterling Struggles for Direction as Iran Talks at Impasse

  • Iran war impasse keeps sterling in narrow range
  • Markets see no BoE move until September
  • End of war could ease pressure on public finances

LONDON, June 3 (Reuters) - The British pound was little changed ​against the dollar and euro on Wednesday, with investors remaining focused on the conflict ‌in the Middle East, and the impact a prolonged war would have on monetary policy.

Talks to end the war remain at a stalemate, while hostilities flared again on Wednesday as an Iranian missile attack damaged Kuwait's airport and ​the U.S. military carried out strikes near the Strait of Hormuz.

That pushed up oil ​prices on Wednesday, with Brent crude futures trading at their highest level in ⁠a week.

Britain’s greater reliance on imported energy leaves it more exposed than the United States to ​higher global fuel costs. While prices have eased from their late April highs, they remain significantly ​above their levels before the U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran on February 28 that ignited the war.

The pound was last down about 0.1% against the dollar at $1.3447, within the middle of its recent range.

Against the euro , sterling was ​little changed at 86.34 pence.

BOE RATE HIKE PUSHED BACK

Investors are betting that the Bank of England ​can wait before hiking rates and have lowered expectations for future hikes from the start of the war.

Money market ‌futures ⁠are not fully pricing in a quarter-point rate hike until the September meeting, while just under two hikes are priced by the end of the year.

"The market has given the Bank of England a window to wait this out, as long as the Strait (of Hormuz) opens pretty soon," said ​Gustav Helgesson, macro strategist ​at SEB.

"Obviously it will ⁠depend on what happens with underlying inflation, but as long as we don't see any big surprises there, the Bank of England could sit ​this out and, from a rate-differential perspective, this should weaken the pound."

If ​there was an ⁠end to the war, it could also ease pressure on the public finances, which could act as a positive for sterling, Helgesson added.

In contrast to the BoE, the European Central Bank is widely expected to ⁠raise ​interest rates when it meets next week, while investors are ​starting to bring forward their expectations for rate hikes from the Federal Reserve given recent resilient U.S. data and growing price pressures.

Reporting by Samuel Indyk; Editing by Alex Richardson

Source: Reuters


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