Europe's biggest banks are laying out drastically different paths for the pound.
As sterling dropped this week to $1.4080 - the weakest level since 2009 - Europe's largest lender HSBC said the UK currency will climb to $1.60 by year-end. Meanwhile, the world's second-biggest currency trader Deutsche Bank reiterated its bearish outlook, which calls for a decline to $1.27.
The disparity coincides with the UK facing a slew of challenges, from whipsawing financial markets around the globe and a vote on whether to remain a European Union member, to inflation that's close to zero, damping the outlook for interest rates. While Bank of England Governor Mark Carney on January 19 signaled that a boost to UK rates is still some way off, HSBC says the market has become too pessimistic.
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The pound rose 0.4 per cent in the week to $1.4308, halting a three-week run of declines that was the longest since July. It slid as low as $1.4080 on January 21, the lowest since March 2009. Sterling gained 1.3 per cent to 75.56 pence per euro.