LONDON, Feb 16 — Sterling hit two-and-a-half-year highs against the dollar today and set a nine-month high to the euro as investors continued to bet that rapid Covid-19 vaccinations would set Britain up to recover from its biggest drop in output in 300 years.

The pound rose to US$1.3955 (RM5.62) against the dollar — its highest since April 2018 — in Asian trading, paring some of those gains to trade 0.15 per cent higher at US$1.3926 by 0847 GMT. Against the euro, it reached 87.06 pence, its highest since May 2020, last trading flat at 87.20 pence per euro.

Speculators have increased their long positions on the pound — bets that the currency will appreciate against the dollar — for a second consecutive week in the week up to last Tuesday, CFTC data showed.

Britain’s coronavirus-ravaged economy suffered its biggest crash in output in more than 300 years in 2020 when it slumped by 9.9 per cent, data showed last week.

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Still, sterling is the best-performing G10 currency this year, up 2 per cent against the dollar, and 2.5 per cent against the euro.

The pound’s outperformance against the euro is attributed by analysts to a slower vaccine rollout in other European countries.

Meanwhile, expectations of large fiscal stimulus in the United States and an overall negative outlook on the dollar have given the pound/dollar exchange rate — known by traders as “cable” — a boost.

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Investors betting on a rebound in global growth — known as the reflation trade — have also contributed to sterling’s gains as the currency is considered correlated with growth and risk sentiment.

“Sterling continues to push ahead as the dividend of rapid vaccination and the currency’s relative high beta among the three majors (USD, EUR and JPY) both help in the current reflationary environment,” strategists at ING said in a note to clients.

“We expect the EUR/GBP medium-term valuation gap to continue closing (we estimate EUR/GBP medium-term fair value at 0.82, based on our BEER model) this year and next. But with the GBP showing signs of a modest overvaluation based on our short-term financial fair value model, the pace of near-term appreciation may slow from here.” — Reuters