The British pound continued its historical trend of starting the year on a weak note, marking a seventh consecutive year of losses on the first trading day after New Year’s Day.
Deutsche Bank (ETR:) analysts noted that the pound fell over one percent today, contributing to a long-term pattern where sterling has only posted three positive returns on the first trading day of the past twenty years.
The bank’s analysis suggested that the pound’s performance is not isolated, as the Euro against the U.S. dollar () has shown a similar pattern, though slightly less pronounced. The movements in the Cable, the term used for the currency pair, often align with the repricing of relative interest rates at the start of the year.
However, today’s interest rate movements were minimal, despite a downward revision in the UK’s manufacturing PMI and more favorable unemployment claims data from the U.S.
Deutsche Bank attributed the additional underperformance of the pound to a “beta of the technical breaks” from last year, referencing the fall of the Euro to last year’s lows and the decline of the pound to multi-month lows.
The technical analysis suggests that these breaks in key support levels have contributed to the downward pressure on sterling.
Looking ahead, Deutsche Bank found no strong pattern that would indicate whether the initial losses of the pound on the first trading day would reverse or continue in the week following.
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