The value of the pound has fallen to
a two-month low against major currencies after Prime Minister Theresa
May signalled the UK would pursue a so-called "hard Brexit" from the EU.
Sterling fell about 1% across the board. The only currency against which it gained ground was the Turkish lira.
The Prime Minister told Sky News on Sunday that she wanted the best possible deal for leaving the EU.
However, she dismissed the idea that the UK could "keep bits of membership".
She added: "We're leaving. We're coming out. We're not going to be a member of the EU any longer."
Commentators
interpreted this as meaning that Mrs May would not seek to keep the UK
in the EU's single market, with radical consequences for the country's
economy.
'Populist politics'
By mid-afternoon, the pound was down 1.1% against the dollar at $1.2149, while against the euro, it was 1.23% lower at €1.1522.
"Sterling
is on the back foot on Monday after Theresa May's comments were taken
as a sign the UK government would prioritise immigration controls over
single market access," said Neil Wilson, senior market analyst at ETX
Capital.
"Domestic populist politics trumps the trade card for now, it seems, and that is weighing on the pound."
Mr
Wilson predicted "more volatility" in the sterling exchange rate,
adding that it could easily "bounce back" as the tone of political
discourse shifted.
HSBC currency strategist Dominic Bunning
agreed: "[Mrs] May saying that it's not about keeping 'bits' of the EU
suggests it's not going to be about keeping access to the single market.
"She said we will have full control of our borders, and given what
the other side of the debate - the EU - has said, that's not compatible
with full access to the single market, free movement of capital, free
movement of goods and services.
"That's the direct trade-off that the [foreign exchange] market is looking at."
Inflation rising
Paresh
Davdra, chief executive of RationalFX, said: "The looming fears that
the UK might exit the single market continue to weigh down on the pound,
and we expect the volatility to continue until further and actual
on-ground clarity emerge.
However, he added: "All is not lost for
the UK, as the fall in the pound's value has attracted international
market activity and simultaneously boosted the country's export
figures."
The pound fell sharply in the immediate aftermath of the UK's June 2016 vote to leave the EU.
The weaker pound makes UK goods cheaper for buyers overseas, but increases the cost of imported goods.
Analysts
expect UK inflation to pick up this year as the impact of higher import
costs feeds through to the economy. Last week, a string of economic
surveys indicated that companies were facing rising price pressures as
import costs increased.
November's Consumer Prices Index (CPI)
inflation rate was 1.2%, up from 0.9% in October and the highest since
October 2014, when it stood at 1.3%.
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