The pound has reached a
more-than seven year high against the euro, a day after the European
Central Bank (ECB) began its government bond buying programme.
Sterling rose 0.45% to hit €1.40 for the first time since December 2007.
City analysts said continued fears over a Greek exit from the eurozone helped push the pound higher.
It came after the head of the eurozone finance ministers'
group called on Greece to "stop wasting time" and engage in serious
talks on reform.
Bond buying
At a meeting in Brussels on Monday, Dutch finance minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem said there had been little progress made since discussions two weeks ago.
European creditors want to approve a detailed list of reforms before they release any loans to Greece.
Jeremy Cook, chief economist and head of currency strategy at
foreign exchange traders World First, said alongside concerns over
Greece, the ECB's bond buying programme and negative bank deposit
interest rates were "hammering" the single currency.
The ECB began its €60bn (£42.8bn) monthly bond buying programme on Monday.
On Tuesday, sterling rose to €1.4017 before falling back slightly.
Inflation target
Announcing the start of the programme last week ECB president
Mario Draghi said the bank would continue to buy bonds into the second
half of 2016.
However, Mr Draghi kept the door open to continuing the
programme past this deadline, should inflation in the eurozone have
failed to return to near normal levels.
The ECB has a remit to keep inflation at or slightly below
2%. But persistent low inflation throughout 2014 stoked fears that the
currency bloc could fall into deflation as consumers held off spending
and businesses postponed investment as price fell.
Mr Draghi said he expected domestic demand to improve over
the course of the year, as the effects of the bond-buying programme
began to be felt, and that demand for European exports, would increase
"as prices become more competitive," thanks to a weaker euro.
He added he expected the lower oil price to be helpful over the next few months.
Last week the ECB raised its forecast for eurozone economic growth to 1.5% in 2015 from its previous December forecast of 1%.
It also upped its forecast for economic growth to 1.9% in 2016, and to 2.1% for 2017.
Also last week, official figures confirmed that the eurozone economy grew by 0.9% in 2014.
Elsewhere on Tuesday, Germany's BGA trade association raised its forecast for exports, expecting the weaker euro to offset uncertainty surrounding crises in Greece and Ukraine.
It said it expected exports to grow 4.5% this year, up from a
previous forecast of 4%. Imports are forecast to rise 4% which would
increase Germany's trade surplus to a record €231bn, BGA said.
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