Sterling Dips to $1.34 Amid Weak Jobs Data
2026-05-19 07:31
By
Joana Ferreira
1 min. read
The pound slipped to $1.34, as investors processed disappointing UK jobs data and tracked developments in the Middle East conflict.
Payrolls dropped by 100,000 in April, the sharpest fall since May 2020 and far exceeding forecasts of a 10,000 decline.
The unemployment rate unexpectedly rose to 5% in Q1 2026, while regular wage growth slowed to 3.4%, its weakest pace since late 2020, and vacancies fell to the lowest level since 2021.
As a result, traders now expect just two Bank of England rate hikes by December.
Elsewhere, Brent crude stayed near a four-year high after US President Donald Trump delayed further strikes on Iran but warned of a possible "full, large-scale assault" if talks fail.
In UK politics, leadership frontrunner Andy Burnham ruled out changing borrowing limits, easing fears of looser fiscal policy that had driven last week’s UK bond selloff.
Meanwhile, PM Keir Starmer vowed to stay on even if Burnham wins the byelection, hinting at a leadership clash.