The 23-year-old Hirata followed victory at the Fujisankei Classic on the Japan Golf Tour last weekend with a closing six-under-par 66 at the Ocean Course
The pound fell to just Ð1.022 Monday, lowest since the euro's 1999 launch, after reports predicting unemployment will rise and house prices will fall in 2009. Those downbeat reports led currency traders to bet that the Bank of England will cut interest rates further early next year.
The rapid decline in the value of the pound, which has now fallen by around 13 percent against the common European currency this month alone, is making life tougher for British tourists as the currency sinks toward parity, or just one euro for each pound.
The pound is being driven down by expectations that the Bank of England will cut interest rates to stimulate the economy, which shrank by 0.6 percent in the third quarter, and looks like it is heading into a serious recession.
Interest rate cuts can weaken demand for a country's currency by reducing the yield on interest-bearing investments.
On Monday, Hometrack housing researchers said house prices fell by nearly 9 percent in 2008 and predicted that they would fall further next year. At the same time, the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development predicted that employers will lay off at least 600,000 people in Britain next year, making 2009 the worst year for job cuts since 1991.
“We all know that the economy is full of bad news for 2009 _ jobs are going to be scarce, GDP is going to fall, and inflation could drop below 1 percent," said James Hughes, a currency analyst with CMC Markets. “And so, we're expecting an interest rate cut of 50 to 100 basis points in January or February." In financial terminology 100 basis points is a one percentage point.
The pound has fallen by more than 25 percent against the euro this year as the Bank of England has lowered interest rates from a peak of 5.75 percent to a more than 50-year low of 2 percent.
Interest rates in the euro zone remain higher at 2.5 percent, despite a 0.75 percent cut by the European Central Bank earlier this month.
The lower pound raises costs for Britons when they travel to the 15 countries that use the euro, and raises the price of imported goods.
Exporters, who usually benefit from a lower currency, are not getting much help from the pound's decline because the global economic slowdown is leading to weaker consumer demand in Britain's major export markets of the United States and Europe.
The pound was little changed against the U.S. dollar on Monday at $1.4598. At this time last year, 1 pound would buy more than $2.
The 23-year-old Hirata followed victory at the Fujisankei Classic on the Japan Golf Tour last weekend with a closing six-under-par 66 at the Ocean Course
My 34-year-old brother went out for a walk on Sunday morning and didn’t return, said Hanna Karen Arroyo Leyva
Pegula's dream run in New York will lift her to a career-high-matching No. 3 in the world
The shower are expected to produce up to 8 meteors per hour at their peak during the early morning
This US Open was the first Grand Slam Sabalenka had won since the death of her former boyfriend in March
The poll indicates that Tuesday's presidential debate could be crucial
The EU's call came after Spain said it will grant political asylum to Venezuelan opposition leader Edmundo Gonzalez Urrutia
financial, insurance, and business services sectors surged 7.1%