Sterling dips but on track for weekly rise as Burnham poised for power
FXB•Euro pares gains as sterling stays firm
The pound also retraced some of its recent rally against the euro EURGBP=D3 on Friday, with the common currency up 0.15% to 85.03 pence.
Yet the euro was still on track for its fourth straight weekly decline against the pound, with sterling helped by greater political certainty and better-than-expected UK growth figures.
However, ING currency strategist Francesco Pesole said the pound looked somewhat over-valued after rising to a 13-month high against the euro.
Pesole said British bond yields could fall, knocking the attractiveness of the pound, if markets scaled back their bets for around 35 bps of Bank of England rate hikes this year, which he said looked too high.
Sterling eases but remains on weekly rise
LONDON, July 17 (Reuters) - The pound slipped on Friday but was on track for its third consecutive weekly rise, with UK assets supported in recent days by reports that incoming prime minister Andy Burnham has chosen a centrist to be finance minister.
Sterling GBP=D3 was last down 0.2% at $1.345, as it gave back some of its sharp gains on Wednesday and as the safe-haven U.S. dollar found some support from ongoing strikes in the Middle East.
Yet it remained set to rise 0.4% this week after rallying on Wednesday when newspapers, including the Financial Times, reported that Burnham was likely to pick Shabana Mahmood as his finance minister over the more left-leaning Ed Miliband.
Political certainty supports the pound and bonds
Traders took news of the likely appointment as a sign that Burnham, who is set to become leader of the governing Labour Party on Friday and prime minister next Monday, is not planning to ramp up spending as some investors had originally feared.




