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    Lebanon recovery plan includes central bank debt write-off, haircuts to depositors

    (Reuters) – Lebanon’s government foresees cancelling “a large part” of the central bank’s foreign currency obligations to commercial banks and dissolving non-viable banks by November, according to a financial recovery plan passed by the Cabinet on Friday.The document, seen by Reuters and verified as accurate by a minister, was passed by the Cabinet in its final session hours before losing decision-making powers, following the election of a new parliament on May 15.It includes several measures that are prerequisites to unlock funds from a preliminary deal with the International Monetary Fund agreed in April that could help pull the country out of a three-year financial meltdown.Deputy Prime Minister Saade Chami said approval of the plan was a “step forward” but that Lebanon’s newly-elected parliament must “quickly” adopt a number of the IMF prior actions, such as amendments to banking secrecy regulations and a capital controls bill that lawmakers have repeatedly failed to endorse. “We can put things on paper but we have to ensure whatever we committed to is being executed in the future,” Chami said.”I cannot predict whether they will do it or not, whether there is a political will to do it.”The plan endorsed Friday foresees a full audit of the Central Bank’s forex financial standing by July. Then, the government “will cancel, at the outset, a large part of the Central Bank’s foreign currency obligations to banks in order to reduce the deficit in BDL’s capital,” the document said.The largest 14 commercial banks, representing 83% of total assets, would also be audited. Viable banks would be recapitalized with “significant contributions” from bank shareholders and large depositors. The plan said it would protect small depositors “to the maximum extent possible” in each viable bank, but did not lay out a minimum amount to be protected – unlike draft plans. Non-viable banks, however, would be dissolved by the end of November, it added.It also said the government would unify the official exchange rate, ending a system in which the government offered various exchange rates for different operations. Lebanon’s local currency has lost more than 90% of its value since its economic decline began in 2019, and banks have locked savers out of hard-currency deposits. In April 2020, the Cabinet endorsed a recovery plan that was then torpedoed by powerful political parties, the Central Bank, and commercial banks, who disputed the distribution of losses.Mike Azar, an expert on Lebanon’s financial crisis and former economics professor at Johns Hopkins University in the United States, said the most recent plan was a “small evolution” of the one agreed two years ago. “It’s the only hope we have right now but there are plenty of shortcomings within the text and a small chance it will get implemented,” Azar told Reuters. Fragmentation in the newly-elected parliament could hamper efforts to get relevant bills passed.”There’s room to amend it on the margins as many details still aren’t fleshed out,” he said. The plan makes no mention of a sovereign fund to manage state-owned assets but pledges to limit recourse to public assets, which had been a demand of Lebanon’s commercial banks. Buy-in from banks is unclear. This April, the Association of the Banks in Lebanon (ABL) rejected a draft version of the same plan, which it said would leave banks and depositors shouldering the “major portion” of a government-estimated $72 billion hole in the financial sector. A spokesman for the association said it “did not meet yet to discuss the decision of the government, therefore ABL still endorses its last statement in this regards.”Lebanon’s banks have been major lenders to the government for decades, helping to finance a wasteful and corrupt state that tipped into financial meltdown in 2019. More

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    Crypto Biz: Amid crypto carnage, Goldman and Barclays fill their bags, May 12-18, 2022

    The Terra saga took an interesting turn on Wednesday after Terra co-founder Do Kwon managed to convince network validators to accept a proposal that would salvage the blockchain without the algorithmic stablecoin, TerraUSD (UST). More than 91% of community votes were in favor of “rebirthing” the Terra network and doing away with UST entirely. The “old” blockchain would continue to support so-called “residual UST” holders and operate under the name — wait for it — Terra Classic. All is not well for the Terra ecosystem, however. Kwon has been summoned for a parliamentary hearing regarding his failed project, while three members of Terraform Labs’ legal team resigned this week. Continue Reading on Coin Telegraph More

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    Early heat wave to bake U.S. East Coast as late snow blankets Denver

    DENVER (Reuters) -A sizzling heat wave will blanket a wide swath of the Eastern United States this weekend, pushing temperatures in New York and Boston to near record highs, while Denver is bracing for a foot or more of snow, the National Weather Service said on Friday.From Washington, D.C., to Massachusetts, forecasters say the mercury could reach the mid-to-upper 90s. Normally at this time of year, the region enjoys cool springtime weather in the upper 60s to mid 70s, said Marc Chenard, a forecaster with the NWS Weather Prediction Center in College Park, Maryland.In the western half of the country, a separate weather system is pushing cold air south into Colorado. Between 12 and 18 inches of snow are expected to fall between Friday night to noon Saturday, Chenard said, with temperatures plummeting from 88 degrees F on Thursday to the low 40s on Friday.”In Denver, it’s a pretty big swing from summer back to wintry weather, but it’s not unprecedented,” he said. “So, no records are being broken. It’s just unusual.”Late season snowfalls in the Mile High City are rare but not unheard of. An inch of the white stuff fell May 29, 1975, and a half inch dusted Denver on June 6, 1953The threat of heavy snow led the Colorado Rockies to postpone its game with the New York Mets scheduled for Friday at Denver’s Coors Field. The irony of the snow-out for the Mets, who escaped the New York heat when the team flew out West, was not lost on those who follow baseball.”The Mets not playing cause of snow is insane,” wrote Twitter (NYSE:TWTR) user Young YE after the announcement.New York City, where 73 degrees F is average for mid-May, could hit 93 degrees F on Saturday, while temperatures in Washington could reach 96 degrees or higher, Chenard said. Temperatures should drop to normal on Monday.Forecasters said the early-season heat wave will result from a high-pressure dome of air in the upper atmosphere that is deflecting the typical flow of cool air from Canada, pushing it westward. That allows hot air from the southern and central states to move into the northeast, he said.The National Weather Service also issued a tornado watch for Maryland, Delaware, New Jersey and parts of southern Pennsylvania from midday on Friday and to 7 p.m. A watch means that conditions are favorable for the formation of a tornado. More

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    U.S. Justice Department releases $5 million for hotlines to report hate crimes

    The money is one of several steps Garland outlined to improve reporting and prosecution of hate crimes, which reached their highest level in more than a decade in 2020, the most recent year for which figures are available.Those figures are not comprehensive as state and local authorities are not required to report them to the FBI, which defines a hate crime as a traditional offense like murder, arson, or vandalism with an added element of bias.The FBI has said it is investigating three recent shootings as possible hate crimes, in Buffalo, New York, Dallas and southern California. Criminologists have said that shooters, mostly young white men, have been inspired by previous racist gun massacres. Authorities say the man charged with Saturday’s shooting in Buffalo posted a racist screed online before killing 10 people, all of them Black.Garland said the Justice Department also will issue new guidelines for raising awareness about hate crimes and will release another $5 million for community-based approaches. Those steps were specified by legislation that President Joe Biden signed into law a year ago.”We will use every legal tool at our disposal to investigate and combat these kinds of hate crimes and their collateral impact that they have on the communities that they hurt.” More

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    Is the global economy heading for recession?

    If Leo Tolstoy were writing about today’s business conditions, he might have noted that happy economies are all alike but every unhappy economy is unhappy in its own way. China’s growth prospects have been hammered by strict Covid-19 lockdowns in a bid to quell its Omicron outbreak; the US Federal Reserve risks turning an American boom into bust; Europe’s households are enduring a cost of living crisis; and the situation is worse in many poorer emerging markets, where food crises and even famines beckon. These four different but imposing problems each stalk the global economy as it recovers from the pandemic and it is not surprising the mood is darkening. According to Robin Brooks, chief economist of the Institute of International Finance, the confluence of these shocks suggests the world economy is already in trouble. “We’re in another global recession scare now, except this time we think it’s for real,” he says. A city worker disinfects a Covid test site in Beijing. Accounting for 19% of the world’s total output, China is now so large that when it catches Covid the rest of the world cannot ignore its pain © Kevin Frayer/Getty ImagesFinancial markets have taken fright. The MSCI world index of equities fell more than 1.5 per cent in the past week, more than 5 per cent in May and more than 18 per cent since a peak in early January. Dhaval Joshi, chief strategist at BCA Research, notes that on top of a torrid time for stocks, there has been a sell-off in bonds, inflation-protected bonds, industrial metals, gold and crypto assets. “The last time that the ‘everything sell-off’ star alignment happened was in early 1981 when Paul Volcker’s Fed broke the back of inflation and turned stagflation into an outright recession,” Joshi says. Defining a global recession is no easy task. For individual countries, some economists define a “technical recession” as two consecutive quarters of contraction in gross domestic product. The Financial Times prefers a more flexible definition as does the US, where the National Bureau of Economic Research defines a recession as “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and that lasts more than a few months”.At a global scale definitions become still more difficult. The IMF and World Bank prefer to characterise a global recession as a year in which the average global citizen experiences a drop in real income. They highlight 1975, 1982, 1991, 2009 and 2020 as the dates of the previous five global recessions. While the official global growth forecasts for 2022 still seem far off this definition — in April the IMF expected annual growth of 3.6 per cent this year — this figure relates as much to the recovery in the second half of 2021 as to expectations for 2022. When the fund looks at the growth it expects during 2022, it has already cut its forecast from 4.5 per cent in October last year to 2.5 per cent in April. Brooks reckons that the news since this forecast was published has been sufficiently bad to lower the growth projection to just 0.5 per cent during 2022, less than the expected increase in population. “Mounting global recession risk is top-of-mind for markets, which has important repercussions for investor psychology,” Brooks says. China is the big economy that most economists are worried about and the past week has seen new data reinforcing concerns about its prospects. Accounting for 19 per cent of the world’s total output, China is now so large that when it catches Covid the rest of the world cannot ignore its pain, especially because of its impact on global supply chains and its demand for goods and services from other countries. Severe strains are showing. With lockdowns rippling through the country, ships queue outside Chinese ports and the country’s manufacturing and retail sectors have started to contract. Retail sales fell 11 per cent year on year in April, while industrial production was down 3 per cent. China’s home sales also dropped more last month than in early 2020, when its economy went into reverse, despite the People’s Bank of China loosening monetary policy to encourage borrowing and spending. Unemployment is rising. Kevin Xie, senior Asia economist at the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, says that China’s economic data in April was consistently disappointing. Although the outlook depends crucially on the spread of Covid, he adds, “falling employment and weakened confidence among business and households will curb spending and bode poorly for the growth outlook”.In the US, the other global economic powerhouse, the economy is suffering from the pandemic’s legacy and, in particular, excessive fiscal stimulus that arguably ran the economy too hot and generated high inflation even with modest energy price rises. Alongside a very tight labour market, the Fed has been forced to concede an error and has now moved decisively into a phase of tightening monetary policy to slow growth and bring inflation down. People carry shopping bags in San Francisco. The US is suffering from the Covid legacy and excessive fiscal stimulus that arguably ran the economy too hot and generated high inflation © David Paul Morris/BloombergThe Fed chair Jay Powell was crystal clear this week that the central bank would continue raising interest rates until it saw “clear and convincing” evidence that inflation was returning to the 2 per cent target. He was not concerned about unemployment rising “a few ticks” from the current low level of 3.6 per cent. Powell added that he was aiming at a soft landing for the economy, but many in financial markets think that might be hard to achieve. Krishna Guha, vice-chair of Evercore ISI, warns there is a much higher than normal risk that the tough talk from officials, economists and market participants would become a self-fulfilling prophecy and generate a downturn. “To say a softish landing is possible is not to say it is inevitable or even particularly likely,” Guha says. Although he is not predicting a US recession, Guha says, “bringing inflation under control without a recession and large increase in unemployment . . . will be challenging”.On the other side of the Atlantic, Europe’s equally difficult problem is different. Apart from the UK, inflation stems almost universally from higher energy prices rather than an overheating economy and can be traced directly to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Unfortunately for the EU, understanding the cause of Europe’s woes does not diminish its consequences. With inflation of 7.4 per cent in April, eurozone prices are rising much faster than its citizen’s incomes, imparting a hit to living standards that will limit spending and the recovery from the pandemic. New forecasts from the European Commission this week were scaled back sharply and implied stagnation in the second quarter of 2022. The commission expects the economy to get over this difficult period and return to reasonable growth of about half a per cent per quarter by the summer, but many private sector economists think the hit to incomes will have longer-lasting effects. Christian Schulz, an economist at Citi, says that the official forecasts appear too optimistic and it is more likely there will be “virtually no growth for the rest of the year”. If Europe’s difficulty is in adjusting to much higher energy prices, poorer countries have the even harder task of dealing with the rapid rise in the price of food, which account for more than 30 per cent of expenditure in emerging economies. António Guterres in Irpin, Ukraine. The UN secretary-general says Russia’s invasion is helping to ‘tip tens of millions of people over the edge into food insecurity’ © John Moore/Getty ImagesWith the Black Sea ports that Ukraine uses for exporting grains shut, fears of a food crisis later this year are mounting. António Guterres, secretary-general of the UN, said on Wednesday that the conflict in Ukraine, coming on top of existing pressures on food prices, “threatens to tip tens of millions of people over the edge into food insecurity followed by malnutrition, mass hunger and famine”.Although it has its own domestic political and economic crises, Sri Lanka epitomises the dire choices faced in many of the world’s poorest countries when it decided this week to default on its foreign debt for the first time. This, it said, was necessary to use its hard currency for importing fuel, food and medicine. India, meanwhile, intensified the problems in other emerging economies by reneging on a pledge not to ban the export of grain this week. Wheat prices rose again and are up more than 60 per cent this year.Naturally, as recession risks rise, the best news for the global economy would be a Russian withdrawal from Ukraine and an end to the zero-Covid strategy in China. This is not in the gift of economic ministers and officials, so instead, they will again have to fine tune their response to the difficult situations they face. In Europe and emerging economies, this will involve alleviating the consequences of higher food and energy prices — raising benefits and subsidising food and energy in countries with sufficiently strong public finances. The US and UK could accelerate the tightening cycle of monetary policy, while China will seek to limit the negative effects of the Omicron coronavirus wave in China.The majority view among economists is that the defence against global recession will still win in 2022. But economists are increasingly hedging their bets in the face of relentless bad news. Innes McFee, chief global economist at Oxford Economics, says there is little question that the global economic expansion is close to a peak, that it is slowing and that policymakers will need to work out how much tightening is needed. But, he says, a recession is still unlikely for now because policymakers still have the tools to back away and stimulate if things get worse. “Recession risks rise into next year, but they are not that high at this time,” McFee says. More

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    No easy solution to UK cost of living crisis

    Good evening,UK consumer confidence has plummeted to its lowest level since 1974, according to market researcher GfK. Its survey measures how people regard the state of their personal finances and wider economic prospects and the index fell 2 percentage points to minus 40 in May.The report comes at a time when the government is under pressure to combat a cost of living crisis, with rising UK inflation hitting the poorest hardest.Meanwhile, the Bank of England is unsure how high interest rates will need to increase to curb rising prices. Sebastian Payne, the FT’s Whitehall editor, says boosting welfare benefits would be a step in the right direction and ministers should consider a quarterly welfare assessment.Three-quarters of FT readers believe the government should impose a windfall tax on energy groups, according to an FT poll. Money from this one-off levy could be used to help households cope with soaring energy bills. However, there is mounting pressure on UK chancellor Rishi Sunak to cut taxes — not raise them.Adapting to a difficult economic climate usually means that households spend less. But in an unexpected turn, British retail sales rose 1.4 per cent between March and April, partially reversing declines in the previous two months, according to the Office for National Statistics.April’s rise was driven by an increase in sales of alcohol, tobacco and sweet treats, suggesting people are staying in to save money and perhaps consoling themselves with a drink and some snacks.The extent of a country’s dependence on Russian energy is one of the key factors in how fast its inflation has risen since Moscow full invasion of Ukraine caused fuel prices to surge. For many Europeans, the nearer they are to Russia, the faster their cost of living is rising.However, Japan is not worried about inflation, which is currently running at 2.5 per cent, even though the country is heavily exposed to some of the same shocks as other countries. After decades of stagnation, Japanese workers no longer demand higher wages and companies do not pass on price rises.Latest newsGerhard Schröder steps down as Rosneft chair after Ukraine backlashG7 agrees $19bn in aid to help Ukraine pay bills in face of invasionJapan to ease entry restrictions for foreign visitorsFor up-to-the-minute news updates, visit our live blogNeed to know: the economyUS president Joe Biden has decided to water down his Indo-Pacific Economic Framework in an eleventh-hour move to attract more countries to join the deal that he will unveil in Tokyo on Monday. The Asian economic policy is a response to criticism from allies and partners in the region that the US was too focused on the security threat posed by China, ignoring the economic opportunities its allies present.Wall Street stocks fell into a bear market on Friday as mounting concerns over economic growth and inflation sent investors racing away from the world’s biggest equities market.Global stocks had previously rallied after China unveiled fresh stimulus measures to reverse a growth slowdown in the world’s biggest emerging market. Beijing also cut its main mortgage interest rate by the largest amount on record as it seeks to offset the economic impact of Covid lockdowns and a property sector slowdown. The UK is hoping to conclude talks on joining a major Pacific trade bloc by the end of this year, as London pursues new commercial opportunities around the world post-Brexit. The country had already completed the first part of joining the 11-nation Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, which includes Malaysia, Vietnam, Japan, Australia, Mexico and Canada.Latest for the UK and EuropeBrussels is to help EU countries end their dependency on Russian nuclear fuel as it seeks to cut the bloc’s ties to Russian energy by 2027. The European Commission said it would assist five EU states — the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovakia, Bulgaria and Finland — that use Russian-designed reactors to speed up the process of licensing alternative fuel. However, Italy has increased its imports of Russian crude despite the EU’s embargo talks, in an unintended consequence of western sanctions against the Kremlin.So far, the UK is the only country to have announced plans for an autumn Covid booster. But most Britons are expected to be denied the jabs after the government’s vaccine advisory group provisionally advised that only care home residents, the over-65s, frontline health and social care workers and vulnerable younger people should be eligible.Global latestThe US Senate approved $40bn in military, economic and humanitarian assistance for Ukraine yesterday as Russia continues its offensive in the country’s Donbas region.North Korea faces a Covid catastrophe without vaccines as Omicron sweeps the country. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, said the communist state was still refusing offers of vaccines, medicines, tests and technical support.Need to know: businessCanada said it would move to ban Huawei and ZTE from providing 5G services in the country, in the latest move by a US ally to outlaw Chinese telecoms equipment suppliers. The US and several of its allies have expressed strong concerns in recent years about Huawei’s ties to China’s military and its ability to facilitate Beijing’s cyber espionage abroad.US law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell has been criticised for agreeing to participate in a Hong Kong government event to commemorate the city’s controversial national security law.Elon Musk has denied media reports alleging that SpaceX paid a flight attendant $250,000 to settle claims of sexual harassment against him, saying the “wild accusations are utterly untrue”.Sexual misconduct allegations at prominent New York asset manager GoldenTree have ignited a multimillion-dollar legal dispute that offers an insight into the inner workings of the business.McDonald’s has agreed to sell its Russian business to Alexander Govor, a local franchisee who operates 25 of the chain’s restaurants in Siberia.Science round-upWhat are the effects of Covid-19 on the brain? Memory and concentration problems caused by severe Covid are comparable with the decline that takes place between the ages of 50 and 70, or the equivalent of losing 10 IQ points, says a recent study.In recent months, several Covid vaccine manufacturers have cut their jab sales forecasts for this year, citing an oversupply of doses and vaccine hesitancy in Africa, which has low vaccination rates. A lack of vaccine coverage increases the chances of new variants emerging, say health experts.African leaders have called on the organisation in charge of procurement for the Covax vaccine sharing scheme to commit to buying at least 30 per cent of all Covid jabs produced on the continent. The plea comes as Africa’s top vaccine production plant, Aspen Pharmacare in South Africa, faces an uncertain future due to falling demand.Get the latest worldwide picture with our vaccine trackerAnd finally . . . Pigs are smart, complex and emotional animals. They can make good pets and have worked as sheepdogs and guard dogs. By equalising the upbringing of pigs and dogs, researchers hope to show which differences between the two species are due to nurture and which to nature, according to chief features writer Henry Mance.

    One study found that pigs react differently to different types of music, suggesting they experience a range of emotions © Gerrard Gethings More

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    Japan, Europe tread different paths as G7 warns of inflation risks

    KOENIGSWINTER, Germany (Reuters) – Having long trod a similar path in tackling low inflation, Japan and Europe now appear to be taking contrasting approaches to monetary policy and the risks of rising prices, which drew warnings at this week’s Group of Seven gathering in Germany.Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda repeated his dovish mantra on Friday, saying the recent cost-push inflation will be short-lived and will not warrant withdrawing stimulus.”There’s absolutely no change to our view it’s appropriate to maintain our yield curve control policy, including negative interest rates,” Kuroda said after attending the G7 finance leaders’ meeting.Kuroda’s tone contrasted with those of European officials who are becoming increasingly concerned about inflation, enough to pre-commit to rate hikes.”It is for sure that negative interest rates are a thing of the past,” European Central Bank policymaker Joachim Nagel said after the G7 meeting.”The fact is that inflation dynamics have changed profoundly within a relatively short period of time. Accordingly, monetary policy has changed in most G7 countries.”With the United States also struggling to tame soaring inflation, the G7 finance leaders’ communique said central banks must calibrate the pace of monetary tightening to address inflation reaching “levels not seen for decades”.German Finance Minister Christian Lindner, who chaired the G7 meeting, said central banks had a “great responsibility” to help get inflation under control.Japan’s core consumer inflation only slightly exceeded the BOJ’s 2% target in April for the first time in seven years.That pales in comparison to euro zone inflation that hit a record 7.4% in April, well above the ECB’s 2% target even after stripping out an outsized increase in energy and food prices.Kuroda insists that Japan’s slow wage growth and sticky deflationary mindset would keep inflation from rising much.But Europe’s case underscores the danger of being complacent about the risk of inflation broadening.The ECB grossly underestimated inflation last year and played down concerns about mounting price-pressure for months.ECB President Christine Lagarde all but ruled out rate hikes as recently as in December, before abruptly changing course and opening the door to the first bank’s rate hike in over a decade.The key to when Japan could finally join other economies in exiting extraordinary stimulus will depend on the outlook for inflation expectations – and the fate of the yen, analysts say.The yen’s recent slide to a two-decade low below 130 to the dollar has been a source of concern for Japanese policymakers, as it pushes up already rising import costs for fuel and food.”The (BOJ) will raise the yield target at some point but it’s hard to see that happening now,” said Kit Juckes, a macro strategist at Societe Generale (OTC:SCGLY), pointing to Japan’s weak economy and “incredibly well-anchored” inflation expectations.”I’d have thought the Japanese authorities would like to keep the yen stable in a 120-130 range,” he said, adding that the BOJ will have to normalise policy if the yen slumps to 140. More

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    Sterling set for its biggest weekly rise since Dec 2020 vs dollar

    The U.S. dollar was headed for its worst week since early February, showing fatigue after the currency’s breathless 10%, 14-week surge.Money markets are fully pricing in another 25-basis-point interest rate rise at the BoE’s June meeting and 128 basis points of tightening by the end of the year, up from around 115 bps on Tuesday right after solid labour market data.British retail sales jumped unexpectedly in April, official data showed on Friday.On Friday, the pound was down flat against the dollar at $1.246, after rising 1.65% this week – the biggest weekly gain since the 2.3% in the week ending Dec 18, 2020.”UK retail sales have come in a little better than expected and break/suspend the narrative that the cost of living squeeze is large enough to derail the Bank of England tightening cycle,” ING analysts said.This week’s data showed Britain’s jobless rate hitting a 48-year low in the first three months of 2022. Consumer price inflation rose 9% in April, while a Reuters poll of economists had pointed to a reading of 9.1%.According to Unicredit (BIT:CRDI) analysts, long-term models suggest the British currency is undervalued against the dollar and the euro, but “less aggressive BoE, focusing more on UK GDP growth concerns, might weigh on sterling”.They expect the BoE to hike rates much less than the forward rate, creating a “repricing risk for the GBP, as long as investors further scale back rate-hike expectations”.However, the central bank’s chief economist, Huw Pill, said on Friday the BoE would need to raise interest rates further to combat the risk of self-perpetuating price rises.Sterling rose 0.1% versus the euro to 84.74 pence.”New-found hawkishness at the ECB means that EUR/GBP may struggle to sustain a move below 0.8450 before returning to 0.8600,” ING analysts said. The pound has been showing a high correlation with risky assets, while their outlook remains challenging in the face of central banks’ tightening and risks of an economic slowdown. More