The British pound rose yesterday as arch-Brexiteer Boris Johnson took over as prime minister, while European stocks mostly fell on the weak mining sector.

Sterling gained versus the euro and dollar as traders readied for Mr Johnson – a leading Leave campaigner in Britain’s shock Brexit referendum three years ago – to take the reins from outgoing premier Theresa May.

Sterling had briefly rallied Tuesday in reaction to Mr Johnson’s election as Conservative Party leader, with investors keen to see whether he pushes ahead with a no-deal divorce from the European Union at the end of October.

“The pound is beginning to stabilise, proving that a lot of the scepticism about Boris Johnson’s Brexit policy was already built into the price,” said City Index analyst Fiona Cincotta.

“Sterling is trading a touch higher this morning,” she noted.

Ms May was forced out after failing to get parliamentary support for a Brexit deal she had struck with EU leaders.

Meanwhile, Europe’s major stock markets mostly fell, with miners weighed down by sliding iron ore prices, dealers said.

In afternoon trading, London’s FTSE 100 was down by 0.8 per cent. In the eurozone, Paris CAC 40 shed 0.3 per cent but Frankfurt’s DAX 30 won 0.4 per cent in value.

“The FTSE 100 is firmly in the red as mining stocks are weighing on the index,” said CMC Markets analyst David Madden.

“A sell-off in iron ore prices in China has prompted a decline in major mining stocks like Rio Tinto, BHP Billiton, and Glencore.

“Brazil’s Vale won approval to restart iron ore production, and that triggered the drop in iron ore prices.”

Most Asian markets enjoyed another day of gains, with support coming from more healthy earnings results and renewed hopes for a resolution of the China-US trade war.

The latest big-name firms to post positive results were Coca-Cola, toymaker Hasbro and Harley-Davidson, helping all three main indexes on Wall Street end with sharp gains overnight.

Adding to the upbeat mood were reports that US President Donald Trump’s Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer will lead a delegation to China next week to resume trade talks.

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