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A chart from a trading platform has shown how much Sterling has lost strength against the world’s leading currencies. Prime Minister Liz Truss and Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng plan to borrow money to fund the £45billion tax cut announced on Friday, alongside a bailout for energy companies costing around £60billion. After the Chancellor’s “mini-budget” on Friday, the Pound dropped in value to a record low.
TradingView, charting platform and social network, posted a graph on Twitter which shows the strength of world currencies throughout 2022.
It charted the American, Canadian and Australian Dollars, as well as the Euro, the Pound and the Yen.
The US Dollar has surged over the year, and near 9.11am UTC on Wednesday had seen 22.42 percent growth in strength over the year period.
Over the same period, the British Pound had fallen to the second lowest with a drop of 22.38 percent.
The chart says the strength of the Japanese Yen has plummeted the most in the year period, with a fall of 23.38 percent.
However, the Pound saw the largest drop in strength, with the currency falling to $1.03 early on Monday before regaining some ground to stand at $1.08.
On TradingView’s website, they hold that the value of the Pound relative to the US Dollar is at $1.081 as of 10.07am on Thursday.
The website’s technical analysis ratings, which combine the ratings of several technical indicators, said, in brief, the Pound is currently rated as a “sell”.
According to TradingView’s moving averages, a stock indicator which creates a constantly updated average price, the Pound is a “strong sell” against the US dollar.
READ MORE: Former BoE boss erupts at Truss for ‘undercutting’ bank
Currency traders said they were concerned by Mr Kwarteng’s announcements as according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies think tank, Government borrowing is expected to rise to £190billion in 2022 and to around £100billion a year for the next four years.
Traders leaving work in Canary Wharf made their views on the policies known to Express.co.uk, with some even predicting Liz Truss’s political demise by the end of the year.
One exasperated insider told Express.co.uk: “We don’t know what’s f*** happening.”
Another, who works in economic research, echoed the comments. He said: “Things have been changing so fast the last few weeks, sometimes [it feels like] days happen in years. It’s so volatile it can be hard to keep up.”
He added: “The talk has been will Truss be out by December and who will replace her?”
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