UK Banking Set To Remain Challenging In 2019

 | Dec 18, 2018 10:38

Compared to previous years, 2017 was a fairly steady one for the UK banking sector despite rising concerns about a rise in consumer credit, the effect of low interest rates, as well as the emergence of further legacy issues for Royal Bank of Scotland (LON:RBS)

When we looked ahead to 2018 a year ago it was always optimistic to assume that we’d see similar outperformance from a sector that was always likely to be vulnerable to concerns about Brexit, a possible slowing of the global economy and yield curve differentials that were always likely to struggle to move higher against a weak interest rate outlook.

A lot of the Brexit pessimism in the aftermath of the June referendum was always overdone, and the performance of the UK economy since then has borne that out, however the UK economy still faces a myriad of problems that continue to remain unaddressed, while the problems that have bedevilled the banking sector remain far from resolved.

Across Europe, the problem of bad loans still remains unresolved with the budget stand-off between the European Commission and the Italian government likely to rumble into 2019. This is already creating ripple out effects elsewhere with the banking system in Greece struggling to find ways to recapitalise itself, without wiping out its capital buffers.

Germany’s biggest bank, Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) continues to stagger from one crisis to the next, having replaced its CEO Jon Cryan in the summer with a retail banker, Christian Sewing, while trying to extricate itself from various scandals involving money laundering, as senior board members come under scrutiny from regulatory officials.

The share price for Deutsche has fallen back to new multi-year lows as management look to cut costs further in order to return the bank to a sustainable business model. There has been further talk of a possible merger with Commerzbank (DE:CBKG), however this still remains a tall order given the size of the two banks. In essence you’d be creating one huge problem as opposed to two big ones. It would be like two drunks propping each other up at the bar, and wouldn’t resolve the underlying problem of a German banking sector remains hamstrung by negative rates, as well as too many banks and too many branches. .

On the plus side wage growth does appear to be picking up, particularly here in the UK at precisely the time that inflationary pressures are starting to diminish. The big problem for UK banks has been one that has been looming large for several months now and that is the outcome of the Brexit negotiations, along with uncertainty about the strength of the global economy, which has started to show signs of misfiring.

The post referendum rally in the FTSE 350 bank index ran out of steam in January this year slightly exceeding the peaks seen in 2015, and has been in a slow decline since then on a combination of factors, not particularly related to how well the banks have actually been doing in there day to day business.

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