Gulf News

Carney’s dire warning on no-deal Brexit

BRITAIN’S HOUSE PRICES COULD FALL MORE THAN 30% IN SUCH A SITUATION, CENTRAL BANK GOVERNOR SAYS

-

Britain’s property market would crash and mortgage rates spiral up in the event of a chaotic no-deal Brexit, with house prices falling 35 per cent over three years, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney is believed to have told UK ministers.

The UK is due to leave the European Union on March 29 and yet little is clear. There is, so far, no full exit agreement between Brussels and London and some rebels in Prime Minister Theresa May’s Conservati­ve Party have threatened to vote down a deal if she clinches one.

Details of Carney’s briefing to the cabinet have been reported by British newspapers, but the Bank of England declined to comment and it was unclear what assumption­s Carney’s models were based on.

Carney is said to have warned the ministers, including May, that the impact of a chaotic no-deal Brexit could be as catastroph­ic as the 2008 financial crisis.

“Our job is to prepare for the worst, not hope for the best,” Carney, a former Goldman Sachs banker who has run the Bank of England since 2013, had said in an opinion piece.

“By identifyin­g the risks and coming forward with solutions, the Bank is working hard every day to get our financial system in shape for Brexit, whatever form it takes.”

Many business chiefs and investors fear politics could get in the way of Brexit, thrusting the world’s fifth largest economy into a “no-deal” divorce they say would weaken the West, spook financial markets and clog up the arteries of trade. In recent months, May’s government has stepped up planning for a no-deal Brexit and has underscore­d the disruption that such a move would cause to businesses and the public.

Without a deal, the UK would move from seamless trade with ■ the rest of the EU to customs arrangemen­ts set by the World Trade Organisati­on for external states with no preferenti­al deals.

In one note of optimism, Carney said that if May struck a Brexit deal on the basis of her “Chequers” proposals then the economy would outperform current forecasts because it would be better than the bank’s assumed outcome.

Carney, whose term of office was extended until the end of January 2020 to deal with Brexit disruption, told ministers a chaotic exit would lead to a plunge in sterling that would drive up inflation and interest rates. Further, the Bank of England would be unable to soften the crisis by cutting interest rates because of the inflationa­ry impact of such a move, Carney told ministers.

Worst-case scenario

If Carney’s worst-case scenario were to come to pass, then such a crash in house prices would spell political death for any prime minister, though there was scepticism about the reports from his opponents and some economists. “Carney has made himself a laughing stock in the City with such an outrageous warning,” said Richard Tice, a Brexit supporter who is co-chair of “Leave Means Leave” group.

Meanwhile, Carney said the Bank of England and Britain’s largest banks are well prepared for a disorderly Brexit.

“We have used our stress test to ensure that the largest UK banks can continue to meet the needs of UK households and businesses even through a disorderly Mark Carney, sometimes nicknamed the “unreliable boyfriend” due to mixed signals about the future path of interest rates, gained respect from some investors for his actions to calm markets in the immediate aftermath of the 2016 Brexit vote. Britain’s central bank stresstest­ed lenders against a 33 per cent house price fall last year, and some economists questioned whether Carney’s comments to ministers had been reported accurately. “Carney reported comments on UK house prices not remotely credible, but I also think highly unlikely they were made as reported,” said Simon French, chief economist at Panmure Gordon merchant bank.

UK house prices fell 19 per cent peak to trough during the 2008 financial crisis but then rose by 38 per cent from their low in March 2009 to June 2016, the month of the shock Brexit referendum result.

In the two years since the 2016 vote, house prices have risen by a further 7 per cent, according to ONS data. London has been the hardest-hit property market in the UK since the Brexit vote, with appetite for expensive city centre housing damaged by concern about financial services jobs after Brexit and higher purchase taxes.

House prices in London’s overvalued market will fall this year and next, and will tumble if Britain fails to reach a deal, a Reuters poll of analysts and experts had predicted in August.

Mark Carney | Bank of England Governor

Brexit, however unlikely that may be. Our job, after all, is not to hope for the best but to plan for the worst,” he said at a conference in Dublin.

British economic growth has slowed since June 2016’s Brexit vote.

 ?? Reuters ?? Mark Carney, Governor of Bank of England (left) is said to have warned UK ministers that the impact of a chaotic no-deal Brexit could be as catastroph­ic as the 2008 financial crisis.
Reuters Mark Carney, Governor of Bank of England (left) is said to have warned UK ministers that the impact of a chaotic no-deal Brexit could be as catastroph­ic as the 2008 financial crisis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates