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The pound and shares have surged after the Conservatives won a clear majority in the UK general election.

Sterling gained 1.9% to $1.34 - its highest level since May last year - on hopes that the big majority would remove uncertainty over Brexit.

The pound also jumped to a three-and-a-half-year high against the euro.

On the stock market, the FTSE 100 share index rose 1.5%, while the FTSE 250 - which includes more UK-focused shares - leapt 4%, hitting record highs.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the election result meant that the Conservative government "has been given a powerful new mandate, to get Brexit done".

Mr Johnson has pledged to take the UK out of the European Union by 31 January.

Politically sensitive shares saw sharp rises in morning trading on UK markets.

Shares in water companies such as Severn Trent, which faced the possibility of nationalisation under a Labour government, shot up 6%, while UK housebuilders also saw big gains, with a huge 10% rise for Persimmon.

Shares in banks exposed to the UK economy rose sharply. Barclays, RBS and Lloyds were up 7%, 11% and 6% respectively.

Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Markets.com, said housebuilders had been undervalued and rose "on hopes that construction will benefit from the Conservative victory".

"We should also consider the potential risk that a Labour government could have posed to their profits being removed," Mr Wilson said.

While many FTSE 100 shares saw big gains, this was offset slightly by the rise in the value of the pound, which affected companies with big international operations. A rise in sterling cuts the value of companies' overseas earnings when they are brought back to the UK and converted back into pounds.

In contrast, the FTSE 250 index - which generally contains firms with more exposure to the domestic economy - jumped more than 5% at one point, before slipping back slightly.


The financial bookies had already installed Boris Johnson as the favourite, but did not expect him to romp home by such a distance.

The pound moved sharply higher as soon as the exit poll was published and went on to post one of its biggest one-day gains against the dollar in nearly three years.

Ian Tew, sterling trader at Barclays, told the BBC that Johnson's decisive victory had "removed a layer of uncertainty".

That is well put - there are many other layers for the markets to now focus on. The challenge of completing a trade deal with the EU by this time next year is formidable and traders on the Barclays floor are already muttering about the prospect of a new Scottish independence referendum.

Markets have given the prospect of a government with a functioning majority a round of applause, but at time of writing, the value of the pound is already beginning to retreat from the highs it hit overnight.


Guy Foster, head of research at wealth manager Brewin Dolphin, said that "the potential for a smooth Brexit removes some of the downside risk for the UK economy".

"This should be positive for both business and consumer confidence, at least in the short term, with a gradual acceleration in GDP growth and confidence.

"However, a lot can change over the coming months as the finer detail of the UK's future trade relationship with the EU is negotiated.

"This is still, after all, just the beginning of the exit process. Even with the passing of the withdrawal agreement, the UK could still leave the EU without a deal at the end of 2020 if trade negotiations don't proceed successfully."

Andy Scott, associate director at financial risk adviser JCRA, said: "What will be interesting to see - assuming that Brexit will now follow a set course, at least [until] 31 January - is if economic data is given a significant boost from the perceived certainty, and [whether it] starts to influence sterling again.

"In recent months, the market has almost completely ignored the slowdown in the economy and the potential for monetary stimulus from the Bank of England, with election and Brexit expectations driving fluctuations in sterling's value.

"The performance of the economy is likely to be key to whether we see a further recovery in 2020."