Latest Channel 4 News:
Row over Malaysian state's coins
'Four shot at abandoned mine shaft'
Rain fails to stop Moscow wildfires
Cancer blow for identical twins
Need for Afghan progress 'signs'

Pound at seven-year low on dollar

Source PA News

Updated on 20 January 2009

The pound slumped to its lowest level against the US dollar in more than seven years on Tuesday as fears over the Government's financial bail-out and UK debt gripped markets.

Sterling slumped to below the psychologically significant 1.40 dollar mark against the greenback, hitting a low of 1.39 dollars.

The pound also fell against the euro to about 1.07 euros, undoing much of its recent gains against the currency.

Mark O'Sullivan, dealing director at Currencies Direct, said the falls took sterling back to a level last seen in July 2001. He said they were partly due to investors' reaction to Monday's second bank bail-out and worries that further measures may be needed.

But he said there were also fears the UK's debts could be downgraded, meaning UK Government borrowing could become more expensive. "Is the second bail-out the answer or are the banks going to have to come back again or be nationalised?" he said.

"Second, will the debt be downgraded?" He said Tuesday's slump represented a 3% drop for the pound against the dollar and warned if the Government's plan does not work, sterling could fall by a further 10%.

But he said the UK was not the only country to be facing a debt mountain adding that the US government's state aid packages had created similar worries.

James Hughes, market analyst at CMC Markets, said the falls would have been affected by Monday's Government bail-out and the announcement by RBS that it estimated bad debts and write-downs on the value of past acquisitions could put it as much as £28 billion in the red.

But he dismissed the idea that the UK was "going to become the next Iceland" and said any talk of bankruptcy was premature. "They are a factor and a possibility, but they are a long way off," he said.

He said official figures showing the biggest fall in inflation last month since the recession of the early 1990s, was likely to have weighed on markets.

These news feeds are provided by an independent third party and Channel 4 is not responsible or liable to you for the same.

Send this article by email


Watch the Latest Channel 4 News

Watch Channel 4 News when you want

Latest Business & Money news

More News blogs

View RSS feed

Faisal Islam on Twitter

How to tweet

How and why to follow the Channel 4 News family on Twitter.

Most watched

image

Find out which reports and videos are getting people clicking online.




Channel 4 © 2010. Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.