Business Day

UK may depend on kindness of strangers

UK bond market has been a haven, but some money managers start to worry about a crash

- Anooja Debnath and John Ainger London/Brussels

For post-Brexit Britain the kindness of strangers and their money will be more vital than before. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has ramped up his rhetoric that the UK will leave the EU at the end of October.

For post-Brexit Britain the kindness of strangers and their money will be more vital than before. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has amped up his rhetoric that the UK will leave the EU at the end of the month. In the worst-case scenario, a chaotic exit followed by ratings downgrades, a plunge in the pound, a government boosting spending and a central bank struggling to support markets could cause capital to flee from the country’s bonds.

It is far from the consensus call — gilts have up to now acted as a haven from Brexit risk. But some money managers are starting to worry about the UK’s heavy reliance on foreign investment to finance its large current account deficit — or in Bank of England governor Mark Carney’s words the “kindness of strangers”.

“If we have a no-deal Brexit then these strangers are going to get worried,” said Mike Riddell, a portfolio manager at Allianz Global Investors, which has reduced its UK debt holdings in recent weeks. “In that environmen­t are gilts going to be a safe haven? Absolutely not

— they are going to be the opposite of safe havens.”

A bond market crash would drive up the government’s borrowing costs, making it more painful for any post-Brexit administra­tion to spend its way out of trouble. With the initial economic disruption, that would risk snowballin­g into a deeper recession.

While the pound has slumped 18% since the June 2016 Brexit referendum, gilts have returned investors nearly 20%. They have surged this year on gloominess over the world economy, offering similar returns to US treasuries and more than Germany, according to Bloomberg Barclays indices. And unlike German bonds, they still offer positive yields.

Overseas buyers have snapped up gilts in the past year at the fastest pace since 2016, increasing their holdings since the Brexit referendum by about £100bn, according to data from the Bank of England. That compares to more than $7bn of foreign investor net outflows from UK equities this year.

While debt from developed markets tends to rally on economic weakness — due to speculatio­n central banks will cut interest rates — in emerging markets capital tends to flee, due to rising repayment risks or a loss of confidence. Volatility in sterling is at emerging-market levels and UK assets are set for a substantia­l repricing once the Brexit outcome becomes known, Carney said last month.

North Asset Management’s chief investment officer, George Papamarkak­is, is looking at betting on a decline in longmaturi­ty gilts. To him, whoever forms the next government after a no-deal Brexit is likely to increase spending.

“It is a pretty simple equation — you’ve got less demand because of uncertaint­y and you would have more supply because the policy of choice now is fiscal,” he said. “That’s why it is a pretty clear trade to be short longer-dated gilts.”

The UK’s debt management office says the gilt market is in a relatively solid position given deep liquidity and a diverse investor base, being more than triple the size it was 11 years ago at more than £1.6-trillion.

“The underlying strength of the market has stood us in good stead over the past few years against the effect of a number of external events,” said Robert Stheeman, the CEO of the debt management office.

“Contrary to the expectatio­ns of many, the gilt market has reacted in an orderly way.”

Foreign investors held more than £556bn of gilts, or 28% of the total, as of March. While this vote of confidence implies they do not expect a disorderly Brexit in the near future, the data on non-resident buying needs to be watched for any signs of slowing demand, said John Wraith, head of UK rates strategy at UBS Group.

How the central bank and credit agencies deal with the fallout from Brexit will be key for investors.

For Paul Nicholson, a portfolio manager at Australia’s Queensland government­owned QIC, the “absolutely farcical” Brexit process means he is taking no chances. “At the moment we have exited all UK positions — all bonds, all currencies and a vast majority of our credit positions,” Nicholson said.

 ?? /AFP ?? Going alone: Prime Minister Boris Johnson has promised that the UK will leave the EU by the end of October even if there is no basis for a future relationsh­ip.
/AFP Going alone: Prime Minister Boris Johnson has promised that the UK will leave the EU by the end of October even if there is no basis for a future relationsh­ip.

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