Pound hits one-month high after Reeves speech

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Rachel Reeves announced the return of house building targets and cleared the path for onshore wind developments
Rachel Reeves announced the return of house building targets and cleared the path for onshore wind developments - Jonathan Brady/Pool Photo via AP

The pound hit its highest level in nearly a month after Rachel Reeves set out plans to increase house building, unblock infrastructure projects and attract private investment as part of a new “national mission” to drive economic growth.

Sterling was up 0.2pc against the dollar at $1.284, its highest since June 12, after the Chancellor said that previous governments had been unwilling to make the “difficult decisions to deliver growth”.

Ms Reeves added: “I will not hesitate.”

The Chancellor said she will reinstate mandatory housing targets “so the answer cannot always be no” and announced an immediate end to the “absurd” ban on new onshore wind developments in England.

The pound was also up 0.2pc against the euro, which is worth 84.4p, its lowest level since June 14, after the French elections left Europe’s second largest economy on course for a hung parliament.

Anna Leach, chief economist at the Institute of Directors, said: “The Chancellor is right to focus on the need to deliver stability and growth for the long-term.

“It is great to hear priority being given to addressing the UK’s sclerotic planning system, and the delivery of renewable energy, and we look forward to further details on the National Wealth Fund.”

Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, said the pound had jumped as “traders assessed her policies and the potential boost they could bring to UK economic growth”.

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Regulator orders inspection of 2,600 Boeing 737s over oxygen mask problem

America’s Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said today that it is requiring inspections of 2,600 Boeing 737 airplanes because passenger oxygen masks could fail during an emergency.

The FAA said it was requiring the inspections of 737 Max and NG airplanes after multiple reports of passenger service unit oxygen generators shifting out of position, an issue that could result in an inability to provide supplemental oxygen to passengers during a depressurisation.

Boeing issued a bulletin to airlines calling for visual inspections on June 17, the FAA said.

Airlines must conduct a general visual inspection and, if needed, replace oxygen generators with new or serviceable oxygen generators, strap thermal pads and reposition impacted oxygen generators, the agency said.

Boeing told The Telegraph:

In June 2024, Boeing shared detailed instructions for operators to update a subset of the restraining straps on 737 oxygen generators.