Some observers argue the media and some
economists are exaggerating the impact of the UK vote a week ago. They talk about the petition for a second referendum. They
about Scotland vetoing the decision to leave the EU. They talk about the UK never invoking Article 50 and
rehash all the ways the EU has subverted the popular in recent years.
These deniers note how well UK assets have
actually performed. UK gilt yields are at record lows despite the
two-notch downgrade by S&P as it took away the UK's AAA status, and the single step downgrade by Fitch.
All three major rating agencies have negative outlooks on their ratings
of the UK. The FTSE 100 is up nearly 2% since the referendum and is the
only major bourse that is higher. So what that sterling sold off? It was sharp but only last two days.
Despite the slightly heavier tone today, it began the day three-four
cents above the week's lows.
This is simply cherry-picking. Almost three-quarters of the FTSE
100 revenue come from abroad. Its relative outperformance is a currency play
and a bearish assessment of sterling at that. The FTSE 250 is off around
5.5%, which is on par with the markdown of other major European bourses
post-referendum.
The Great Graphic is
from Bloomberg, and it shows three different measures of the UK stock
market. The white line is an all-stocks index. It is up
fractionally. The green line is the FTSE 250, which is composed of small
and medium-sized business. Their focus is on the domestic market.
The yellow line is the FTSE 100.
The rally in UK bonds has indeed been
impressive. The 10-year yield is off 44 bp, and the 2-year yield has dropped 34 bp.
The problem is that what is driving the rally are expectations that the
UK is headed for a recession and that the
Bank of England will be easing monetary policy. BOE Carney confirmed
this today.
The speed that sterling came off on Carney's comments lends credence to our
suspicions that the lows for sterling are
not in place. The large
current account deficit, which was also confirmed today, requires capital
inflows to offset. Under floating exchange rates and capital mobility,
the UK will get the funds, and what is being
negotiated is the price.
There can be no mistake. Even without invoking Article 50,
the UK has already lost influence, and influence is power. Moreover, it
will continue to pay (not as much as the Brexit advocates claimed) for the EU.
The UK economy is 10% smaller than it was a week ago, measured in US
dollars, about 7.5% smaller in euro
terms, and nearly 9% smaller when calculated in Chinese yuan. And the same is true of its market cap.
Disclaimer
Great Graphic: What are UK Equities Doing?
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
June 30, 2016
Rating: