LONDON: Sterling was under pressure on Monday as headwinds in the banking sector hit investors’ risk appetite, while rising COVID-19 cases prompted Britain to consider a second national lockdown. The pound was down 0.6% against the dollar at $1.2840 by 0949 GMT, hitting the lowest point in six days.
Versus the euro, sterling was down 0.1% at 0.9178.
A slide in the banking sector set British blue chip companies on course for their worst day in more than three months after reports that some London listed banks were among those that moved allegedly illicit funds over the past two decades.
“This sort of retreat to risk sentiment which is being led by the banks is causing headwinds for sterling,” said Jeremy Stretch, head of G10 FX Strategy at CIBC Capital Markets.
Analysts suggested the pound has been behaving over the past months like a “risk currency”, in that it weakens when market sentiment deteriorates.
Reports that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was pondering a second lockdown also contributed to the risk-averse narrative.
New COVID-19 cases were rising by at least 6,000 per day in Britain and the testing system was buckling in a country that already has the biggest official COVID-19 death toll in Europe at 41,777 people.
“We’re in an environment where the risks of additional lockdowns are building and obviously that’s creating sort of different pressures or difficulties for the recovery story,” Stretch said.
The prospect of a chaotic end to the Brexit transition period in December if Britain fails to agree a trade deal with the EU also continues to hang over sterling.
Banks and second national lockdown threat push sterling down
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