- Data showed that Britain's public finances deteriorated at a much sharper pace than expected last month, taking public borrowing as a share of GDP to its highest on record.
- Analysts said the borrowing figures highlighted the need for the UK government to rein in borrowing or face the possibility of a ratings downgrade.
- The data also took the shine off positive UK retail sales figures, which saw sales rise 0.4% in October having stagnated in the previous two months.
- In addition, risk appetite was taken off the table after major European equity markets fell back over a percent, a trend which was followed on the US indices.
- Investors took the opportunity to continue taking profits from higher-yielding currencies, which gave the greenback further support.
- In the afternoon, a positive reading from the US Philadelphia Manufacturing Index did cap the dollar's gains, but it has made further ground this morning pushing the price down near 1.66.
Friday, 20 November 2009
Lower equities and an easing of risk appetite is keeping the dollar trading broadly higher
The pound was down another half a percent against the dollar yesterday following weak UK borrowing data and an easing of risk appetite.
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