Pound Falls to 2.5-Year Lows, Ignores BoE and Rallies on USD Weakness

The  British pound today fell to  2.5-year lows against the  much stronger US dollar, which was boosted by  yesterday’s FOMC rate decision. The  GBP/USD currency pair was barely affected by  the  Bank of  England‘s interest rate decision before rallying higher later driven by  the  weak greenback.
The  GBP/USD currency pair today fell to  a  low of  1.2081, a  level last witnessed in  January 2017 before rallying to  a  high of  1.2170 and  was trading near these highs at  the  time of  writing.
The  currency pair fell earlier today driven largely by  the  greenback’s strength as  tracked by  the  US Dollar Index, which hit a  2-year high of  98.93 before falling in  the  American session. The  pair attempted to  rally following the  release of  the  Markit/CIPS UK manufacturing PMI, which beat expectations by  0.3 but remained in  contraction territory having come in  at  48.0. The  pair ignored the  BoE’s monetary policy decision, which maintained the  status quo and  promised to  hike rates in  future. The  central bank’s Monetary Policy Committee expressed optimism in  the  British economy despite the  pending Brexit deadline. The  BoE Governor, Mark Carney‘s speech confirmed the  bank’s optimism regarding the  UK economy despite the  imminent risks.
The  cable recouped all of  its losses during the  American session after the  release of  weak US manufacturing data. The  pair fell slightly following the  imposition of  additional tariffs on  Chinese exports by  President Donald Trump.
The currency pair’s future performance is likely to be affected by tomorrow’s UK construction PMI and US non-farm payrolls data.
The  GBP/USD currency pair was trading at  1.2149 as  at  19:21 GMT having recovered from a  low of  1.2081. The  GBP/JPY currency pair was trading at  130.47 having dropped from a  high of  132.55.

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