Where to for the pound?

Financial and commodity markets analytics

In Just a few hours the British Pound is expected to see similar volatility as we saw when the UK unexpectedly voted to leave the EU and depending on the outcome, we may see the currency move up to 10 percent either way.
The House of Commons in Britain will begin voting on UK Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal she negotiated recently and although the deal is not expected to pass, it is the amount of votes by which May loses by that will dictate thing.
Here are a number of scenarios depending on the results according to the following analysts.
RBC Capital Markets
The three key drivers for sterling will be the margin by which May loses the vote, the response of the opposition, and what the government’s plan B is, says chief currency strategist Adam Cole
May would still have a chance at a second vote on her deal if she loses by a margin of 70 or less, while a smaller margin would probably be “knee-jerk GBP-positive”
The risk of another referendum already appears to be priced with with around 40 percent probability, and the pound will gain if the chances of that rise further
ING Groep NV
If a modified deal gets through (10 percent chance), GBP/USD will jump to $1.38, while under a no-deal scenario on March 29 (20 percent chance), GBP/USD will sink to $1.12, said Petr Krpata, chief EMEA FX and rates strategist
The most positive outcome for the pound is a second referendum with an extension of Article 50
Sees at least a 60 percent chance that Article 50 will be extended, though the reasons will be key for the pound:
If that’s because of a general election (15 percent chance), sees GBP/USD dropping to $1.20
If extended because MPs get the government to pursue a different deal (25% chance), GBP/USD could rise to $1.35
If because of a second referendum being called (25% chance), GBP/USD will jump to $1.40
Credit Agricole
May’s loss with “a margin of 100 votes or less could see the pound consolidating further,” said head of G-10 currency strategy Valentin Marinov
“A greater margin than this coupled with a vote of no confidence by Labour could see sterling relinquishing its recent gains”
GBP/USD will be around $1.25 if May loses by more than 100 votes; says CA has a trade that targets $1.39 in six months as it sees sterling embarking on an uptrend

Mizuho Bank
“If she loses by 100 votes or less, I think she still has a chance,” said Neil Jones, head of hedge-fund currency sales
If May is defeated by more than 220 votes, sterling could fall to $1.225
On a loss by a margin of 20 to 100 votes, pound could rally to $1.3350; a rejection by 20 votes would see sterling rally with potential to reach $1.35
Danske Bank
A loss by more than 100 votes will be negative for the pound initially, according to analyst Morten Helt
Base case is that May’s deal will fail to get Parliament’s approval tomorrow, “after that, we are in uncharted territory”
Probability of another meaningful vote is high, while likelihood of a second referendum is also increasing
Call for a second referendum could also come after a potential second vote
Sees GBP/USD around 1.25-1.30 until further clarification
“Extension of Article 50 would be positive for GBP as it reduces the probability of a no-deal scenario. However, it depends on the reason behind a possible extension”
Commerzbank
“Our U.K. analyst assumes that the magic number might be somewhere around 40 -- losing with a lower margin keeps the hopes alive that the proposal could be accepted at some point following repeated votes,” said foreign-exchange strategist Esther Reichelt
“Losing by a higher margin keeps all options on the table, including a new government one way or the other (i.e. voluntarily or forced)”
Loss by a narrow margin would be sterling-neutral or slightly positive; rejection by large margin “would most likely be substantially GBP-negative if she doesn’t manage to officially delay the Brexit process (that is, delaying Article 50 procedure) beforehand”
Rabobank
“Bearing in mind that the EU is not showing any sign of giving ground, May would likely have to lose the vote by a much smaller margin that expected for the market to believe that she could win it in a second round -- probably less than 50 votes,” said Jane Foley, head of Group of 10 currency strategy
GBP would likely be encouraged on this outcome and rally to $1.30, as it signals May’s position isn’t as weak as is currently believed and would reduce the chances of Labour Party’s Jeremy Corbyn calling a no-confidence vote
A loss by more than 200 votes would likely make it difficult for May to hold onto her leadership; markets fear a general election
A far-left Labour government would weigh on pound -- GBP/USD would drop to $1.15/$1.20 levels