Pound to head lower as "all roads" point to hard Brexit


Pound sterling and the euro hover above their post-Brexit lows. Reuters

LODON: The pound is heading lower whatever the outcome of the U.K.’s elections, according to BlueBay Asset Management.

While the currency has rallied since the election was called, BlueBay began selling sterling last week, betting that the U.K. is set for a damaging Brexit process after the vote. 

Such a view chimes with Allianz Global Investors who recently used the rally in the pound to short it, and the median forecast of analysts in a Bloomberg News survey, who see the pound declining about 3 percent by the end of 2017.

“We’ve literally gone short the pound at the end of last week,” said Mark Dowding, a fund manager at BlueBay, which oversees $55.5 billion. 

“We think you’re going to be facing a Brexit that to us looks like it’s going to be a hard Brexit.”

The pound, which tumbled following the U.K.’s decision to leave the European Union last June, has pared some of those losses as investors speculate that the earlier vote will ease pressure on U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May. 

The Conservatives are currently expected to comfortably win the June 8 snap elections with a large majority in Parliament.

Sterling reached a nine-month high of 1.3048 on May 18, and was at $1.2971 as of 12:06 p.m. in London on Tuesday. 

Even after rallying 5 percent in 2017, sterling remains about 13 percent weaker since the Brexit vote last June. 

“There’s been this optimism in markets that a really big majority may actually strengthen Theresa May’s hand and make life a lot easier,” said Dowding, who predicts sterling could retest $1.20 toward the end of the year -- an 8 percent decline from the current levels. 

“I’m not really sure it will make too much difference in practice.”

Tough comments from both sides of the negotiating table signal a choppy path ahead. Bundesbank board member Andreas Dombret said Tuesday divorce proceedings would likely be hard or very hard. 

Those comments came shortly after Brexit Secretary David Davis said the U.K. will walk away from talks unless the bloc drops its high financial demands.

“The most significant point that we would make on the U.K. is that, based on our discussions around Westminster and our discussions around Brussels, it feels that the deal that U.K. politicians think they can achieve seems an unrealistic pipe dream,” Dowding said. - Bloomberg

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