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UPDATE 2-Sterling back above $1.37, helped by dollar turnaround

Thu, 28th Jan 2021 12:23

* Graphic: World FX rates in 2020 http://tmsnrt.rs/2egbfVh

* Graphic: Trade-weighted sterling since Brexit vote http://tmsnrt.rs/2hwV9Hv
(Updates prices, adds detail)

By Elizabeth Howcroft

LONDON, Jan 28 (Reuters) - The pound staged a temporary
retreat on Thursday as investors tempered some of their optimism
about Britain's vaccine rollout, but a weaker dollar later
helped it return above $1.37.

Sterling hit its highest level against the dollar since May
2018 on Wednesday and later reached an eight-month high against
the euro, a move analysts attributed to Britain rolling out
COVID-19 vaccines faster than continental Europe.

Concern about vaccine rollouts globally, and the impact of
mutations of the coronavirus, created a cautious tone in
markets, and a stronger dollar, which meant that the British
currency eased off these highs on Thursday.

But the dollar weakened at around 1340 GMT, with Wall Street
equities rallying, causing cable to head back towards its highs.

At 1626 GMT, the pound was up 0.2% against the dollar, at
$1.3724, compared with Wednesday's $1.3759 high.

Versus the euro, it was up around 0.2% at 88.345 pence,
after peaking at 88.135 in the previous session.

"We consider sterling optimism to be excessive and we see
the risk of disappointed expectations," Commerzbank FX
strategist You-Na Park-Heger wrote in a note to clients.

"The markets are clearly ignoring that the current infection
situation in the UK is still very tense," she said.

Britain has the world's fifth highest death toll from
COVID-19, and Prime Minister Boris Johnson has indicated that a
strict lockdown in England will last until March 8.

British households have cut debit and credit card spending
sharply and the proportion of workers on furlough has risen to
its highest since July.

Britain said it must get all the COVID-19 vaccines it had
ordered and paid for, after some European Union politicians
asked drugmaker AstraZeneca to divert doses from the UK to make
up for a shortfall in supplies.

Elsewhere, British officials told Reuters that the country
will submit a request to join a trans-Pacific trading bloc
grouping 11 countries before it has published an assessment of
the benefits of membership.
(Reporting by Elizabeth Howcroft; Editing by William Maclean,
Larry King and Alexander Smith)

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