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UK stocks may move from Brexit fear to 'fear of missing out'

Published 12/13/2019, 01:31 PM
Updated 12/13/2019, 01:36 PM
UK stocks may move from Brexit fear to 'fear of missing out'

UK stocks may move from Brexit fear to 'fear of missing out'

By Julien Ponthus and Thyagaraju Adinarayan

LONDON (Reuters) - The scale of Boris Johnson's election victory on Thursday may be enough to draw back billions of pounds of investment that have sidestepped UK stocks for years over Brexit, mirroring the U.S. market surge seen after Donald Trump's election three years ago.

With an unexpectedly large 80 seat majority in parliament, the resounding win for British Prime Minister Johnson, who campaigned largely on a slogan of pushing his Brexit deal through in January, could mark a critical turning point for UK equity - the laggard of developed world stock markets over the last decade.

Not only does the size of the majority bring some clarity to the Brexit fog, but money managers say it may well allow Johnson room to face down more extreme elements of his fractious Conservative Party and negotiate a relatively quick trade deal with Brussels involving softer terms than many had feared only a week ago.

If so - and combined with a government spending stimulus in an early post-election budget - the signal to small businesses, the wider UK economy and foreign investors could be electric.

Companies with strong exposure to the domestic economy have been a no-go zone for investors ever since Britain voted in 2016 to exit the European Union, a factor that has led to massive outflows out of equity funds.

Several asset managers have been underweight on UK stocks since then, but a slight uptick in sentiment could quickly suck in tens of billions dollars.

"The election result brings to an end the paralysis that has affected Westminster and is a catalyst for investors to reconsider the value available in public UK equity markets," Mark Barnett, head of UK equities at Invesco, said.

For more than three years, the looming menace of a disorderly Brexit had acted as a drag on UK stocks which have underperformed their European and U.S. peers since the referendum.

Just a day ago, consensus among analysts was that Johnson would win only a modest majority and that he would have to tread carefully in negotiating a free trade deal with the EU.

"There is clearly pent up investment demand and corporate decision making, which should be unlocked by the result," said Richard Staveley, a fund manager at Gresham House Strategic Investment Trust.

"UK equities remain excellent value when compared to many other asset classes, cheap compared to history and other markets – particularly the U.S."

So when the initial euphoria calms down, what could be a catalyst for the longer-term rethink?

Some signs of how Johnson reshapes his top team will be important in signaling how he intends to avoid capture by one faction or another.

And - as per Friday's exchanges - positive noises between London and Brussels about a free trade agreement will be important.

But the "animal spirits" of business sentiment alone could be a trigger in themselves.

In the immediate aftermath of Trump's victory, the U.S. small business optimism index, released in Jan 2017, posted its biggest rise in 30 years. The S&P 500 (SPX) soared 20% that year.

In the UK, investors will be keenly looking into similar signals from business sentiment surveys, such as the Purchasing Managers' Index as soon as January.

British finance minister Sajid Javid said on Friday investors had already decided to put money into the United Kingdom.

Scott Theil, chief fixed-income strategist at BlackRock (NYSE:BLK), said it's not just investors returning to the market.

"Within the UK, you are going to have more commitment of capital to projects and businesses than we've had previously."

CHEAP AND UNLOVED TO FAIR AND LOVED

For years, UK companies exposed to the domestic economy such as housebuilders, banks, retailers and utilities have been under pressure and were under-owned in global asset managers' portfolios.

Johnson's win boosted housebuilding stocks Taylor Wimpey (L:TW), Berkeley Holdings (L:BKGH) and Persimmon (L:PSN) to record highs on Friday.

Allocations to UK equities had hit record lows of 7.5% in September when the no-deal Brexit was among top possibilities, according to Copley Fund Research, which tracks more than 400 funds managing $800 billion in assets. Before the referendum, allocations were around 9.2%.

"I remain convinced that domestically orientated equities, which are trading at historic discounts whilst offering sustainable growth in income at very attractive yields, offer the greatest risk adjusted opportunity to investors," Invesco's Barnett said.

Twelve month price-to-earnings ratios of UK equities are far below their 30-year average, signaling the upswing potential for the assets as and when Brexit uncertainty completely fades and fiscal stimulus kicks in.

"In general, there is a combination of a lifting of uncertainty and valuations, both at a currency level and also at an industry level, that makes investment in the UK attractive and I think that's going to be the important driver of valuations," BlackRock's Theil said.

Graphic: UK equities well below 30Y average, click https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/buzzifr/15/2875/2875/Pasted%20Image.jpg

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