The pound has edged higher against the dollar in anticipation of a key statement from the new chancellor tasked with sorting out the fallout from the government’s mini-budget.
Mr Kwarteng, who was sacked on Friday after just 38 days in the job, paid the price for a mini-budget that called into question the government’s economic credibility on financial markets.
The mini-budget led not just to a collapse in the value of the pound but also prompted a surge in borrowing costs – forcing an unprecedented intervention by the Bank of England (BoE).
However, following the prime minister’s announcement on Friday that Mr Kwarteng had been sacked and that corporation tax would rise to 25% from April next year instead of being kept at 19%, there was a partial recovery for the UK currency and bond yields.
Mr Kwarteng’s replacement, former foreign and health secretary Jeremy Hunt, has since promised to win back the confidence of the financial markets by fully accounting for the government’s tax and spending plans.
Sterling gained 1% to hit $1.1282 on Monday in trade in Asia when the Treasury revealed that Mr Hunt would deliver key parts of a medium-term fiscal plan later on Monday in support of “fiscal sustainability”.
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The statement added that Mr Hunt met the BoE governor and the head of the Debt Management Office on Sunday night to brief them on the plans – measures brought forward from the Medium-Term Fiscal Plan that is due to be revealed on 31 October.
The early measures would first be revealed in a statement on Monday morning before being outlined to MPs, the Treasury said.