KEY POINTS
  • Bloomberg quoted people familiar with the matter as saying that Germany would be ready to accept a less detailed agreement on the U.K.'s future economic and trade ties with the EU in a bid to get a Brexit deal done.
  • The U.K. was also willing to settle for a vaguer statement of intent on the future relationship, postponing some decisions until after Brexit day, according to an official quoted in the report.
Theresa May, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (L), attends a press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on July 20, 2016 in Berlin, Germany.

Sterling jumped on Wednesday, rebounding off a two-week low, after a Bloomberg report that the United Kingdom and Germany were prepared to drop a key sticking point on Brexit negotiations fueled hopes of a breakthrough in talks.

Investors rushed to buy the currency after the report, lifting it nearly one percent to a three-day high of $1.2983. Against the euro, the British currency rallied half a percent to 89.65 pence. The currency had been struggling earlier around $1.2787.