Scotland ‘Yes or No’ – Why & How you need to hedge the FTSE100 / 250 & Gilts


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Summary 
• Scotland’s referendum on independence is too close to call. Markets disliking uncertainty a putting pressure on UK’s currency and credit markets, driving downside risk to UK equities….


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Viktor Nossek – Head of Research of Boost ETP


• Secession weakens the economic fundamentals for Scotland, exposes the rest of the UK to unwarranted credit risks and diminishes London’s political clout. UK mid and large cap  equities are at risk of being de-rated.  
 
• Until the dust settles it may be prudent to hedge long positions in UK bonds and equities.

Scotland’s  independence vote is too close to call.
With  uncertainty overhanging  Scotland’s  future, long term  damage  has been  done  to  the  UK’s political and economic  credibility.  Scottish secession  would  weaken its fiscal  fundamentals and  expose the UK to unwarranted credit risks.
Coupled with diminished political clout within the EU and internationally,  and  an increased risk of ‘Brexit’, UK equities risk being de-rated.    Until clarity emerges well after the vote on Thursday 18 September, it may be prudent for investors to hedge their exposure to UK debt and equities.

   
Too close to call  referendum shakes  sterling and UK credit markets
The latest YouGov survey, conducted on behalf of The Times and  The  Sun,  puts the No vote (i.e. those against Scotland’s seccession from the union, i.e. the UK) at 52%, with the Yes vote at 48%. With  the  No camp again leading by 4%, this  is  a reversal from YouGov’s previous survey (held between 2 and 5 Sep) when the  Yes  camp  stood at 51%,  to  lead  the  No camp by 2%.  The final results,  due around  market opening on Friday, are now  too close to call. The No camp’s lead has dissipated  since August,  with  a negative impact on UK financial markets. Whether permanent damage has been done to both safe haven and risk assets in the UK is too early to tell,  but  the pound has  lost 1.7% against the dollar in August and 2% in September so far. Downbeat sentiment has also hit the UK’s bond markets, with bond yields on 10 year UK  Gilts having risen back to 2.7%,  effectively recouping  the  27 basis points  lost over July and August. Sentiment in UK money markets is also tense, as evidenced by the spike in  short term interbank lending rates and UK government bills this month.
 
UK fixed income at risk
Until the results are released  on  Friday morning, UK fixed income is likely to come under more pressure as investors weigh the net effect a  pro-independence outcome will have on the finances of the rest of the UK (rUK).  Whatever the result, there is likely to  be protacted negotiation thereafter (over  the form of independence, or what powers will transfer to a ‘devo-max’ Scotland).  The biggest sticking points revolve around how much debt  rUK  should  assume when  it loses its  claim on  Scotland’s  tax revenues (and expenses)  and how much risk is born with it? Given the  UK  Treasury’s  commitment to service all current outstanding government debt, the exclusion of Scotland’s GDP from the national account would mean a higher degree of  rUK government indebtedness  vs. rUK GDP. This concern was heightened by Scotland’s separists threatening  to stop servicing  rUK’s  national debt if Westminster refuses to share the pound with Scotland. Because Scotland’s and rUK’s credibility are both at stake,  a  compromise  should emerge, with Scotland  paying  some of  its share to  holders of UK government bonds and bills,  possibly in the form of extending the maturity of debt and/or  lower  interest rates.  Hence, while technically  rUK’s gross government debt as a percentage of GDP may go up if Scotland  becomes  independent, relative to  tax revenues it may well not change much.  Longer term however,  the oil revenues that  rUK loses from Scotland  will  likely be more than  offset  by gains derived from no longer having to finance Scotland’s relatively high expenditure. Reliant on volatile crude oil prices and ever shrinking oil and gas reserves, Scotland’s  main revenue  contribution to the union  is uncertain and  in decline. Yet Scotland’s aging population is certain to drive  higher fiscal transfers
from Westminster to Edinburgh, unless Scottish  taxes are raised.  Independent analysts generally forecast

   
Scottish budget deficits at more than 5% of GDP for the foreseeable future.
 
And therein lies the real risk to the UK bond markets if Scotland votes for  independence on 18  September: what interest rates will markets charge Scotland for its own debt issuance, to service both its remaining union share  of debt  and  its  own  future liabilities resulting from higher spending. Set against  weaker  economic fundamentals  not to mention a less diversified economy,  for the most  part  reliant  on  energy  and  an anxious  financial services  sector, Scotland’s debt will likely face a lower credit rating than the UK’s historical rating, irrespective of whether it retains the pound or not. If the end result is a higher interest charge on any future borrowing by the Scottish government, it  will ultimately make it harder for Scotland to shoulder its share of debt owed to the rUK too.
 
The currency question creates another layer of uncertainty for investors. If Scotland chooses the pound, its fiscal policy may well be misaligned with the BoE’s monetary policy goals. For instance, given the current direction of austerity pursued by the UK’s Conservative/Liberal Democrat  coalition government, the  BoE’s  monetary policy may be too loose for Scotland’s  socialist-leaning government.  A similar problem occurs if Scotland pegs  its  own  currency to the pound, a likely scenario given that the bulk of Scottish trade, some 2/3rd,  is with  rUK.  With it also comes the question of Scotland having sufficient FX reserves to manage  such a currency  peg and avoid out of control  (imported)  inflation.  In both cases, Scotland will be subjected to  the  BoE’s monetary policy  strategy.  Alternatively, if Scotland aims to be fiscally prudent, then either a managed currency peg or  retention of the pound would mean  limited  freedom to tax and spend, a very dependent independence.
 
The third option,  adoption of the euro,  is unlikely to happen soon  given the uncertainty over Scotland’s status vis-à-vis the EU and the timescales involved with ERM membership and euro accession.  In any case, euro adoption would also mean the surrender of monetary policy independence, just  to the ECB  rather than the BoE. While such surrender  seemed to make sense  for many of the overleveraged economies  that joined  the Eurozone,  without fiscal prudence it ultimately proved unstable.
 
Scotland’s seccession  worsens  rUK’s  trade outlook, both with Scotland and with the EU  Even assuming Scotland secedes  without major repurcussions  from its  currency  choice, the risks to rUK’s financial markets remain.  Independence  would provoke calls  from  other regions, both inside the UK and elsewhere in Europe,  for  more  autonomy, loosening  the relationship with central governments.
Such calls may grow more  fractious  against the backdrop of fragile coalition governments torn between more  austerity and  more stimulus (i.e. deficit spending), and the rise of more extremist parties that seek to  exploit the status quo. The  rise  of UKIP  (the UK Independence Party),  a right-wing populist party which promotes anti-immigration and anti-EU policies, has resulted in both the coalition government and the UK’s largest opposition party, Labour, entering  the 2015 election significantly weakened. Faced with such pressures, the  likelihood  grows that the Conservative led coalition government in the UK will harden its stance against the EU and  shape  its agenda  around the  in-out  referendum on  EU  membership, thereby distancing itself further from EU integration.
 
A Yes  victory  would bring  a reduction in the  free movement  of capital, labour,  goods and services, further undermining sentiment in UK equities. Most at risk are the British banks, all of whom have exposure to Scotland  to some degree. RBS and Standard Life, major financial institutions embodying a strong Scottish heritage,  have warned  of relocation  to  rUK if the Yes camp wins, disliking the currency risk on the one hand and the potential changes to taxation and regulation on income and financial assets  on the other.  Mining, energy and defence companies are also facing uncertainties  with respect to extra costs,  and uncertainty regarding contract renewals. At risk too are UK’s midcap equities, servicing Scotland’s energy and mining  sectors. While longer term the weakened pound may help improve the outlook for UK exporters, short  term the tensions on credit markets  are set to dampen  the sentiment on many of the FTSE 100 and 250 names, not least because with UK credit risks rising, investors will be looking to apply a higher discount rate to UK stocks. The BoE may postpone a policy rate  rise  initially. But while  that will suppress short term interest rates, the rebounding economy feeding higher inflation expectations  will  eventually force long term bond yields to climb regardless. Either way, near term the risk to UK equities is to the downside.
 
 
All data is sourced from Boost ETP, and Bloomberg

Source: ETFWorld.it

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