Investing.com - The pound hit fresh three-week highs against the U.S. dollar on Wednesday, as data showing that the rate of unemployment in the U.K. fell to 7.1% in November continued to support demand for sterling.
GBP/USD hit 1.6580 during U.S. morning trade, the pair's highest since January 2; the pair subsequently consolidated at 1.6576, gaining 0.61%.
Cable was likely to find support at 1.6400, Tuesday's low and resistance at 1.6602, the high of January 2 and a 28-month high.
The pound found support after the Office for National Statistics said that the rate of unemployment in the U.K. fell to 7.1% in the three months to November, to stand just above the 7% level the Bank of England has said is its threshold for considering raising interest rates from their current record low of 0.5%.
It was the largest drop in unemployment since 1997 the ONS said.
Analysts had expected the jobless rate to fall to 7.3% from 7.4% in the three months to October.
The ONS said the number of people claiming jobless benefits fell by 24,000 in December, compared to expectations for a decline of 35,000.
The average earnings index rose by a seasonally adjusted 0.9% in November, compared to expectations for a 1% increase, after rising by 0.9% in the previous month.
But the minutes of the BoE’s January meeting, also published on Wednesday, stressed that the bank is in no rush to act.
"It was now likely that the unemployment rate would reach the 7% threshold materially earlier than previously expected," the minutes said, but officials "saw no immediate need to raise Bank Rate," the bank’s benchmark interest rate, "even if the 7% unemployment threshold were to be reached in the near future."
Policymakers also agreed that when the time did come to tighten monetary policy it would be appropriate to do so only gradually.
In August the BoE said it expected the U.K. jobless rate to remain above 7% until at least 2016. A faster-than-expected economic recovery has meant the unemployment rate has fallen far more quickly than the BoE anticipated.
EUR/GBP hit 0.8181, the lowest since January 2012 and was last down 0.54% to 0.8185.