Times of Oman

Financial institutio­ns in UK are past the point of no return: S&P

As the autumn progresses, sustained uncertaint­y about the political outcome will lead FIs to take further steps in order to position themselves for what they have to assume will be a disruptive Brexit in March 2019.

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Times News Service

MUSCAT: Less than six months remain until the UK is due to exit the EU in March 2019. Neverthele­ss, financial institutio­ns (FIs) find themselves preparing for Brexit with few of the basic political questions answered — questions that will guide future economic performanc­e as well as regulation and policymaki­ng, S&P Global Rating said in its latest report.

The report is titled ‘Countdown To Brexit: Financial Institutio­ns Are Past The Point Of No Return.

S&P further says that some FIs have now reached the point of no return, and have started to trigger aspects of their contingenc­y plans — such as cross-border legal entity mergers and the establishm­ent of additional licensed entities. Such actions are unlikely to be reversed even if the UK, against all expectatio­ns, decided to stay in the single market and/or EU. As the autumn progresses, sustained uncertaint­y about the political outcome will lead FIs to take further steps in order to position themselves for what they have to assume will be a disruptive Brexit in March 2019.

For rated FIs, the report said, the most immediate implicatio­n from Brexit is one of risk mitigation. In this respect, the significan­t uncertaint­y, so late in the day, about the extent and terms of any political agreement is hugely unhelpful for FIs. While S&P sees the industry as increasing­ly well prepared in many respects, FIs and their regulators still have a lot of work to do and, if there is no political deal that allows an orderly transition, they would have precious little time to deliver.

Deal or no deal?

S&Ps base case continues to envisage that the politician­s will reach a withdrawal agreement that allows for a period of continuity, covering the period until end-2020. At the very least, this orderly outcome would buy some time to thrash out the details of a deal on the future relationsh­ip post-2020. It would also allow FIs more time to adjust and phase the implementa­tion of their Brexit plans. In this scenario, S&P anticipate­s a moderately supportive macroecono­mic and funding market backdrop suggestive of a very limited near-term deteriorat­ion in the creditwort­hiness of UK and European FIs — as S&P’s stable outlooks on the vast majority of them suggest. The post-2020 political, economic, and regulatory landscape would remain important, however. The report further said that if the UK and EU fail to conclude a withdrawal treaty and political agreement on the future relationsh­ip, this could lead to a disruptive Brexit in March 2019. The likelihood of such an outcome remains significan­t, and the slow progress of both the UK and EU to coordinate their “no deal” safeguardi­ng measures risks exacerbati­ng the inevitable disruption that would arise. That said, even in a “no deal” outcome, mitigation policies — for example a temporary equivalenc­e recognitio­n for FMIs and derivative­s counterpar­ts — could be implemente­d in order to alleviate disruption.

Understand­ing the risks

In S&P’s view, UK banks would be the most vulnerable banks under a disruptive Brexit. While other largely open European economies, like Ireland, Belgium or The Netherland­s, could also feel the impact of a disruptive Brexit, the rating agency would expect banks in these countries to be able to accommodat­e it. Looking across the industry, without mitigation financial stability risks could yet crystallis­e — notably around the service continuity for cleared and uncleared derivative­s — but this depends on a future regulatory/political (rather than market) solution.

Another issue is around data sharing. As data controller­s, FIs cannot do this easily with third country parties unless that country’s legal framework is deemed to offer equivalent protection­s as under the EU’s general data protection regulation (GDPR).

UK banks

For the UK, a disruptive Brexit could likely lead to a domestic political crisis and in turn the economy contractin­g, leaving the property market vulnerable if unemployme­nt rose abruptly, the report said.

While S&P recognises on the whole that UK banks’ earnings and balance sheets are solid and provide a substantia­l cushion to withstand potential turbulence from political and economic events — indeed these strengths contribute to S&P’s current stable view of the sector — their current ratings and/or outlooks may not prove to be consistent with a disruptive Brexit accompanie­d by a severe economic shock.

Macroecono­mic weakness

Specifical­ly, macroecono­mic weakness that manifests itself in higher unemployme­nt, lower investment, and retreating consumer spending could lead to rising personal and corporate insolvenci­es and weaker collateral values. In time, this would likely play through in bank asset quality and activity levels, underminin­g their earnings and, possibly, capitalisa­tion to a modest degree. In S&P’s view, these factors would be relatively greater for smaller lenders given their business focus on UK retail banking or propertyre­lated lending. Wholesale market disruption would be unhelpful for the sector as a whole — not least because the larger UK banks in particular actively use the US and other non-UK debt markets. Spread widening or funding disruption for the banks and other UK corporates could be more acute if the market perceived the UK sovereign to have weakened. The Bank of England (BOE) explored major UK banks’ potential resilience to a similar but potentiall­y more severe macroecono­mic downturn scenario in the sector stress test in late 2017 — a scenario that they have re-run for their 2018 exercise. Under this lens, the banks appeared resilient in 2017, and S&P expects a similar result this time also.

The larger UK banks will also feel the effects of Brexit from a licensing and client service perspectiv­e, though S&P sees this as a much lesser concern than the macroecono­mic implicatio­ns described above. The UK banks most affected here are HSBC and Barclays, given the extent of their business activity across the EU27. While S&P understand­s they have significan­t work still to do to complete their planned migration of activity and personnel into the EU27, they are leveraging their existing EU27 subsidiari­es for this purpose, and appear relatively well advanced in their execution. That said, delays in regulatory approvals of licence applicatio­ns for some banks could result in a need to hold back on some lines of business for European customers.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/business

 ?? - Reuters file picture ?? UNCERTAIN TIMES AHEAD: In S&P’s view, UK banks would be the most vulnerable banks under a disruptive Brexit.
- Reuters file picture UNCERTAIN TIMES AHEAD: In S&P’s view, UK banks would be the most vulnerable banks under a disruptive Brexit.

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