British Pound
With USD strengthening on the appointment of newly minted Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, it was inevitable that Sterling would suffer disproportionately, having been propelled upwards more by USD weakness than innate Pound power when the appointment was dully announced by a more than inarticulate POTUS. Having broken through GBP/USD 1.37 after seeing 1.39 earlier in the week, GBP looks more like consolidating between 1.35 and 1.37 for the moment as the markets start looking ahead to the next Bank of England meeting when there is not expected to be a change in interest rates.
EUR/USD 1.1869.
Gold and Silver
As we warned at the end of last week those precipitous rises in metals seen in January were ripe for corrections and Friday duly saw some metal enthusiasts if not actually trolleyed off certainly seeking treatment. Gold had risen to a record high of USD 5594, while Silver had also seen its record high of USD 121. When stumps were drawn in London on Friday, Gold was at USD 4836 and Silver at USD 85, showing falls of 14% and 30% respectively from their highs. The bull market story is not necessarily over in metals but getting involved requires a strong stomach and ideally a tin hat.
GBP/USD 1.3697.