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Friday 11 December 2020 11:25 am  |  Updated:  Friday 11 December 2020 12:11 pm

Morgan Stanley: UK bank shares could fall 20 per cent in no-deal Brexit

By: Harry Robertson

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UK bank shares have slumped already this year, but Morgan Stanley said they could drop further

Morgan Stanley has said UK bank shares could tumble 10 to 20 per cent in a no-deal Brexit, with the FTSE 250 dropping as much as 10 per cent.

It comes as the UK and EU struggle to sign a free-trade agreement. Prime Minister Boris Johnson yesterday said a no-deal Brexit outcome was now a “strong possibility”.

Morgan Stanley said that markets had been expecting a trade deal to be signed. It said no deal would therefore “represent a genuine and negative ‘surprise’ that markets are likely under-prepared for”.

The Wall Street giant said in a note that the FTSE 100 would not be hit because a falling pound would support it. When the pound drops, the overseas earnings of FTSE firms become worth more in relative terms.

Yet it said UK banks stocks would be hit particularly hard, as they are more closely correlated to sterling. It said the 10 to 20 per cent drop would also be driven by a potential interest rate cut into negative territory.

Bank shares have suffered this year, with the Bank of England having already cut rates to record lows. Worries about bad loans have also weighed on share prices.

More domestically focused shares have also had a rough year, with the UK one of the worst-affected economies by coronavirus.

That would get worse under no deal, Morgan Stanley said. “We would see potential for six to 10 per cent underperformance from the FTSE 250,” it said.

The bank said insurers, real estate and housebuilders would be likely to suffer the most. But it said companies with high overseas exposure would benefit from a lower pound.

“We think markets would react with a controlled degree of disappointment rather than distress given that the wider global outlook remains healthy with strong growth expected next year,” Morgan Stanley said.

“A no-deal Brexit would be unlikely to derail the recovery story for European GDP.”

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