The pound has slumped against the dollar as the US presidential election battle failed to produce an early result and looks set to continue for days.
At midnight, the pound was trading at $1.315 but dropped to $1.290 earlier this morning before settling at around $1.300 in the afternoon.
Leading up to election day, markets had been pricing in a clear sweep for Joe Biden, with the US dollar falling on expectations of increased fiscal stimulus.
The US dollar also gained against a basket of currencies as investors looked for safe havens amid the prospect of extended uncertainty.
This week: The pound has fallen back against the dollar after gaining ground earlier this week
2020: The pound plunged against the dollar when the coronavirus crisis began in March but has since recovered to levels seen around the start of the year
Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said: ‘The dollar has subsequently bounced back to reflect the potential change in the outcome of the election.
‘A stronger dollar versus the pound is good for the large number of stocks in the FTSE 100 which have overseas earnings, thus explaining why the UK index has emerged relatively unscathed from the election updates. It fell at the market open but quickly recovered to trade almost flat at 5,780.
‘US Treasury yields had previously been moving higher on expectations of big US government spending but they’ve subsequently reversed direction as the voting results come in, with the 10-year bonds falling from 0.94 per cent to below 0.8 per cent, which is a significant movement.’
Speaking to This is Money, John Chatfield-Roberts, head of strategy at Jupiter Merlin Portfolios, said: ‘In times of uncertainty, people flock to safe havens, and the dollar is one of the best.
‘For sterling investors, this means any investments they own, such as gold or US shares, that are priced in US dollars will increase in value in sterling terms.’
The knife-edge US election has also seen London’s blue chip FTSE 100 index endure a volatile start to trading as investors fret over an uncertain result.
The FTSE 100 index opened 1.3 per cent lower before swiftly recovering to stand 0.3 per cent or 21.47 points higher at 5,808.24.
By 3pm it was up 84 points or 1.44 per cent at 5,870.
Even before the US presidential row broke out, analysts thought the pound looked set for a rough ride this month.
‘The pound could be in for a long, hard November’, said Martin Miller, a foreign exchange analyst at Thomson Reuters.
He added: ‘It’s under pressure as lockdown restrictions tighten in England, uncertainty over Brexit persists and the daily chart points to further weakness.’
Battleground: US president Donald Trump (pictured today) is battling to retain his presidency
While calm was restored in London following the initial sharp fall, the Dax in Germany remained 0.6 per cent lower, though France’s Cac 40 was 0.2 per cent higher.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 2.06 per cent higher at 27480.03, while the Nasdaq composite added 1.9 per cent.
Today, US markets are performing strongly again, with the Dow Jones up 2.22 per cent or 611.21 points to 28,091.24. The S&P 500 was up 2.97 per cent or 100.08 to 3,469.24 just before 3pm UK time, while the Nasdaq 100 jumped over 4 per cent or 517.10 to 11,797.01.
Last night, the risk-on attitude was witnessed across the board as industrial metals such as copper, silver, platinum and palladium racked up strong gains, according to David Madden, an analyst at CMC Markets UK, said.
He added: ‘Like with stocks, it is possible that the metals were recouping some of the ground that they lost last week. Gold’s inverse relationship with the US dollar worked in its favour.
‘The energy market joined in on the bullish move too, and even though WTI and Brent crude pushed higher in the past two sessions, they have only pulled back roughly half of what they lost in the previous week.’
Meanwhile, Susannah Streeter, an analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said that with Donald Trump already claiming victory even though millions of votes are still uncounted, investors may have to ‘belt up and brace themselves for some volatile sessions of trading ahead.’
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