Pound shrugs off Johnson's latest Brexit setback

Pound shrugs off Johnson's latest Brexit setback

The pound sterling remained steady in Asia trading as a conclusion to the Brexit drama has yet to be reached.
The pound sterling remained steady in Asia trading as a conclusion to the Brexit drama has yet to be reached.

WELLINGTON: Sterling opened to modest losses Monday following British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's latest failure to break the Brexit deadlock, with forex markets shrugging off a weekend of drama in the British parliament.

The currency dipped 0.5% to US$1.2917 when trading resumed at 1800 GMT Sunday, Bloomberg reported, holding relatively steady for a currency that has been on a rollercoaster over the past month.

It came after the House of Commons sat on Saturday to consider Johnson's EU divorce deal in a vote that was seen as a potential turning point in the long-running Brexit saga.

Instead of delivering a verdict on the deal itself, lawmakers voted to force Johnson to ask the European Union for another Brexit delay, hoping to prevent the country crashing out of the bloc on October 31 with no agreement in place.

Johnson reluctantly agreed, although the EU is yet to respond to the request and Britain's conservative government insists it is still committed to exiting by month's end.

It meant that instead of decisive developments over the weekend, the market was still waiting to see how the situation would play out, Rodrigo Catril, a senior forex strategist at National Australia Bank said.

"There's a little bit of wait-and-see mode, we saw the pound lose a little bit of ground, but from the perspective of what it's gained over the past week, that's really minimal," he told AFP.

Catril said it appeared a deal would be done before Oct 31 but a great deal of uncertainty remained, including the possibility of a "confirmatory vote", or second Brexit referendum.

"Based on commentary overnight, there seems to be a fair bit of support rising for Boris Johnson to get the deal done, but details are what matter," he said.

"There's still the potential for a confirmatory vote and the potential for further amendments."

He said sterling had the potential to rise if Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab's claim that the UK government had the numbers to push through Johnson's deal proved correct.

"But we're not yet certain that the government has got the vote, so that points to a little bit of cautiousness in terms of the pound facing a little bit of uncertainty in coming days," Catril said.

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