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By BoE Governor He said the central bank was on alert amid global turmoil in the banking sector. Markets have been roiled in recent weeks by the collapse of U.S. technology lender SVB, followed by the failures of other U.S. regional lenders and the emergency rescue of Swiss lender Credit Suisse by rival UBS. Immediate investor concerns over the banking sector eased as regulators moved to refine their responses to the turmoil. Risk-sensitive sterling rose 0.2% against the U.S.
dollar at "Focus is still very much on the perceived stability in the
banking system," said Top U.S. banking regulators plan to tell Congress that the overall financial system remains on solid footing after recent bank failures, but that they will comprehensively review their policies in a bid to prevent future collapses. "Should their comments show more perceived concern over financial stresses than markets are currently assuming in equity and CDS (credit default swaps) prices, we expect cable (GBP/USD) to drop back to the low-$1.22 mark," Harvey said. In the data front, market researcher Kantar said British grocery inflation rose again in March to a record 17.5%, inflicting more pain on consumers battling a cost-of-living crisis. The BoE raised interest rates last week by 25 basis points to 4.25%, but said a surprise resurgence in inflation would fade fast, prompting speculation it had ended its run of hikes. Money markets are now pricing in a 50% chance of no BoE interest rate increase and the same probability of a 25 bps hike in May. (Reporting by
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