May 8 (Reuters) - Sterling climbed against the euro and the dollar on Friday after local election results in the UK so far confirmed expectations of significant Labour losses, with investors turning their attention to the outlook for British Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Starmer’s Labour party haemorrhaged support in areas reporting results overnight, with results still rolling inon Friday.
Markets also remained focused on developments in the Middle East.
In the UK local elections, analysts argued on Thursday that a poor result by Labour was anticipated but it was not clear whether there would be an immediate leadership challenge to the Prime Minister.
"There have already been calls for him to set a timetable for handing over power," Mohit Kumar, an economist at Jefferies, said. "From a market's perspective, any replacement would be a left-leaning candidate and be fiscally negative," he added.
Gilts rose slightly with the 10-year yield down 2.5 basis points at 4.92%. Some Labour lawmakers have said that if the party fails to hold many of the roughly 2,500 council seats it is defending in England then Starmer will face renewed pressure to quit or at least set out a timetable for his departure. However, British defence minister John Healey said Starmer can still turn things around, when he was asked if the prime minister should set a timetable for his departure.
Forex

May 8 (Reuters) - Sterling rose against both the euro and the dollar after the election outcome confirmed expectations of heavy losses for Labo...


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