The currency has lost nearly 3 percent of its value against both the American dollar—it fell to $1.2151 on Tuesday afternoon—and the euro since Boris Johnson took over as Prime Minister
LONDON — The British pound has long possessed a mystique that transcends its marginal role in the global economy, conjuring memories of its dominance in the imperial age. But lately the currency has devolved into a sign of Britain’s diminishing fortunes in a present dominated by Brexit.
As the country slides toward the European Union’s exits, the latest pressure on its currency comes in the form of the new prime minister, Boris Johnson. Johnson has insisted he is prepared to accept the expensive chaos of leaving the EU without a deal governing future relations.
Investors have taken his ascension last week as the impetus to evacuate their money ahead of a potential disaster: They have sold the pound. The currency has lost nearly 3% of its value against both the American dollar — it fell to $1.2151 on Tuesday afternoon — and the euro since Johnson took over.
The slide is expected to continue, perhaps right up until Oct. 31, the day that Britain is scheduled to depart the European bloc.
“The markets see turbulence for the economy,” said Kjersti Haugland, chief economist at DNB Markets, an investment bank in Oslo. “They see the potential for the economy to contract abruptly.”
The decline in the pound is at once a reflection of the market’s recognition that Britain has been economically weakened by Brexit, and a cause for distress.
©2019 New York Times News Service