If it was me, I'd look into writing a bit of Perl code that can provide you a quote in the GBP currency you wish. It would just need to call the AEX source, change the "%" to "GBP" and give the "proper" quote as a result. I had to do this for a company stock ownership plan that was forced upon us. It used the corporate security, but bundled into a pseudo mutual fund that had a weird conversion from the real world quote to the fund's price (something like <COMPANY STOCK> * 1.122435 = <FUND NAV>). Squirrely, yes?

Anyway, that's a relatively simple way to get what you need without having to wait for someone to implement changes. I doubt, unless it is a generally accepted currency symbol, that they will want to add it as a currency. What I remember of this kind of thing is they try to stick with "official" currency symbols specified by some sort of standard or some such.
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