Saturday, August 13, 2011

Osborne Refuses Review Spending Cuts, Boosting Pound


Great Britain poundUK Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne rejected demands of the opposition to reconsider the spending cuts that are biggest since World War II. The Great Britain pound reacted positively to the news.

Opposition to the spending cuts is strengthening as riots and looting in London intensifies and spreads to other cities. Yet Britain’s government remains firm in their intention to maintain the record cuts. Osborne explained that the credibility of the UK austerity measures helped in attracting investors to government bonds, aiding the nation’s economy. Prime Minister David Cameron claimed that the planned decrease of expenditure on the police can be performed “without any reductions in visible policing”.

The sterling gained against the euro, the dollar and the yen on yesterday’s trading session. The UK currency slid against the greenback as today’s trading session has started. The pound attempts to hold against the yen, but slowly gives up gains. Against the euro Britain’s currency rallied for three sessions and still hasn’t showed signs of weakening.

GBP/USD advanced from 1.6132 to 1.6237 and retreated to 1.6212 as of 1:34 GMT today. GBP/JPY rallied from 123.95 to 124.72 on the previous trading session and attempts to hold at this today. Meanwhile, EUR/GBP fell from 0.8770 to 0.8750 today in the third straight session of declines.

If you have any questions, comments or opinions regarding the Great Britain Pound, feel free to post them using the commentary form below.

Earlier News About the Great Britain Pound:

    Pound Drops with Higher Trade Deficit (2011-08-09)
    Pound Weakens on Worsening Consumer Sentiment (2011-07-21)
    GBP/USD Erases Losses After BOE Minutes (2011-07-20)
    UK House Prices Fall for First Time in 2011, Sterling Weaker (2011-07-18)
    Pound Falls vs. Euro on Jobless Claims (2011-07-13)


This entry was posted on TopForexNews on Friday, August 12th, 2011 at 1:34 am and is filed under Great Britain Pound. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

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