AlQa'dah 21, 1434, Sep 27, 2013, SPA -- Bets on further sterling strength are mounting as some in the financial markets consider the possibility that the Bank of England may be the first of the world's major central banks to raise interest rates, Reuters reported. The BoE shows no sign of standing in the way of such bets with policymakers seeming less concerned than in recent months about the impact of a stronger pound. Upbeat UK economic data has fuelled speculation the BoE might hike rates sooner than suggested by Governor Mark Carney's forward guidance. By contrast, the European Central Bank is seen more likely to cut rates than raise them. And with the Federal Reserve having shocked markets last week by leaving the pace of its money-printing stimulus unchanged, some analysts say the BoE could even tighten policy before the U.S. central bank. All this will push sterling even higher, analysts say. While that would have bothered the central bank a few months ago, recent comments from BoE policymakers indicate a more tolerant attitude towards the pound's recent rise. The biggest contrast in expectations is between BoE policy and that of the European Central Bank, giving the pound even more scope to rise against the euro than versus the dollar. Sterling has risen around 9 percent to above $1.60 since it hit a three-year low of $1.4814 in early July. It has gained more than 4 percent against the euro since hitting a 4-1/2 month low on Aug. 1. BoE minutes released last Wednesday showed the minority of policymakers who had previously backed the case for more stimulus had changed their stance in September. In a newspaper interview published on Friday, Carney said he saw no need for more bond-buying as the British economic recovery had "strengthened and broadened". By contrast, ECB President Mario Draghi said this week the central bank was prepared to offer banks more long-term loans to keep money-market rates from rising to levels that could hurt the economy. -- SPA 18:53 LOCAL TIME 15:53 GMT تغريد