Pound Rallies on Upbeat UK Retail Sales as May Loses Indicative Vote

The  British pound today rallied higher against the  US dollar from the  early European session following the  release of  upbeat UK retail sales data for  January. The  GBP/USD currency pair was trading in  a  see-saw fashion during the  Asian session as  investors remained indecisive regarding the  Sterling.
The  GBP/USD currency pair today rallied from a  low of  1.2784 to  a  high of  1.2831, but was slightly below this high at  the  time of  writing.
The  currency pair opened today’s session with a  slight bullish bias driven largely by  positive investor sentiment amid a  risk-on market mood. However, the  pair’s gains were limited by  yesterday’s UK political developments as  PM Theresa May suffered another defeat in  Parliament. PM May’s defeat during the  indicative vote was largely due to  the  fact that Conservative Party MPs who are members of  the  European Research Group abstained from the  vote.
The  release of  the  UK’s January retail sales data by  the  Office for  National Statistics was the  main trigger behind the  pair’s rally. According to  the  report, headline retail sales came in  at  1.0% versus the  expected 0.2%, while core retail sales were recorded at  1.2% as  compared to  the  consensus estimate of  0.2% growth. A  slight retracement by  the  greenback as  tracked by  the  US Dollar Index also boosted the  pair amid trade war concerns.
The  currency pair’s short-term performance is likely to  be affected by  the  release of  the  UoM consumer sentiment data, President Trump’s speech and  Brexit headlines.
The  GDP/USD currency pair was trading at  1.2827 as  at  12:56 GMT having rallied from a  low of  1.2784. The  GBP/JPY currency pair was trading at  141.64 having risen from a  low of  140.98.

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