The pound fell the most in six years against the euro, declining
to a record, after the Federal Reserve cut its discount rate
and JPMorgan Chase & Co. bought Bear Stearns Cos. Gilts
soared.
The pound also slipped to a three-year low against the yen
and the lowest level in 12 years versus the Swiss franc as
European stocks slumped, prompting investors to pare holdings
of higher-yielding currencies. The Fed cut the rate on direct
loans to banks by a quarter-point to 3.25 percent to shore
up dwindling confidence, its first weekend emergency action
since 1979.
``Sterling is coming under a lot of pressure, triggered by
the U.S. side of the story, with what's happened with Bear
Stearns and the Fed action,'' said Ian Stannard, a currency
strategist in London at BNP Paribas SA, France's biggest bank.
``Equity markets are down and all the yen crosses are under
pressure today, all the high-yielders. Pound-yen was still
very much a carry-trade currency.''
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The pound dropped to 79.12 pence per euro, the lowest level
since the common currency's 1999 inception, and was at 78.29
pence by 9:20 a.m. in London, from 77.58 pence at the end
of last week. It fell to $2.0184, from $2.0202.
Britain's currency fell to 194.99 yen, the lowest level since
January 2005, from 200.18 yen on March 14, and traded at the
weakest since October 1996 versus the Swiss franc, at 1.9777,
from 2.0166.
Stocks in Europe and Asia tumbled after the U.S. central
bank said yesterday it will also provide JPMorgan with as
much as $30 billion to fund the purchase of Bear Stearns,
Wall Street's fifth-biggest lender, and give loans to the
20 firms that buy Treasury securities directly from it.
Carry Trade
The U.K.'s FTSE 100 Index dropped 2.6 percent to a two-month
low, while the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index, a benchmark for
Europe, declined 3.4 percent.
The decline in stocks around the world encouraged investors
to sell higher-yielding currencies, such as the pound, that
they'd bought using low interest-rate loans in yen and Swiss
francs. These so-called carry trade investors borrow cheaply
and invest the proceeds into higher-yielding currencies, earning
the spread between the two interest rates. The trades are
considered risky because currency-market fluctuations can
wipe out profit.
The Bank of England said today Europe's second-biggest economy
was facing ``difficult conditions'' that may slow growth.
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