The cable hit 1.626 on October 1, the level which is the highest since January 2013; however, later the pair eased back to 1.60. Nevertheless, this move looks like a correction, as the Pound is already recovering versus the greenback on Thursday advanced more than 100 pips on the back of another portion of upbeat data from Britain. Even the last-minute budget deal in the United States was not able to push the pair significantly lower. On Thursday the ONS said that sales at Britain's retailers advanced 0.6% in September, from a month earlier, when they plunged 0.8% and 0.2% higher than the median forecast made by analysts. The main contributors to growth came from sales of household-goods, which advanced 3%, while the main downside pressure came from a 0.2% decline in food-store sales. On an annual basis sales rocketed 2.2% over the same period, while core retail, which excludes fuel, inched up 0.7%. Taking into account recent strength in British economy, another upside movement in recent high's direction can be expected.