Sterling slips as investors await Brexit showdown

Members of the UK parliament are to vote on Thursday's EU deal

(FILES) In this file photo taken on December 14, 2017 British one pound sterling coins and Euro coins are arranged in front of a British ten pound sterling note for a photograph in London.  Sterling soared Thursday, October 17, 2019 within a whisker of $1.3, striking five-month peaks after the European Union reached a draft Brexit withdrawal deal with London. / AFP / Justin TALLIS
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The pound retreated on Friday, as relief that a Brexit deal had been agreed was replaced by doubts a proposed deal with the EU will get through the British parliament in Saturday's vote.

The pound held at five-month highs of $1.2874 against the dollar, down from Thursday's peak of $1.2988. It was little changed against the euro, at 86.28 pence.

News of the Brexit deal sent the pound soaring on Thursday. But sterling erased the gains before the UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson's next challenge: getting the deal approved in parliament, where he has no majority.

The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), the Northern Irish party that props up Mr Johnson's government, said it will not vote for the deal.

"(The pound is) reflecting pessimism over the likelihood of whether the deal will be able to pass through parliament tomorrow," said Lee Hardman, currency analyst at MUFG, adding, "We think it's going to be a close call. We're a little more optimistic.”

"If it's rejected you might get a knee-jerk pound selloff, but we don't think the downside risks are that great. We think there'd be an extension and an election. We don't see no-deal risks coming back to the market."

Members of parliament will vote on the deal on Saturday - the first Saturday session since 1982. Britain's scheduled departure date from the European Union is October 31.

The most decisive move on Friday would be a change in the DUP's position, but that looked unlikely, MUFG's Mr Hardman said. Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn has also said he could not support the deal.

Underscoring that the market is on alert for further wild swings in the pound, options linked to volatility expiring within the next week have more than doubled in price since last Friday.

Implied overnight volatility on sterling rose to more than 18 per cent, a new seven-month high.