UK Banks Put Aside Brexit Risk

 | Dec 19, 2019 09:47

Having performed poorly in 2018 there was little confidence that the UK banking sectors fortunes would improve in 2019.

Concerns about Brexit, a slowing global economy, and the prospect of interest rates moving lower had all the ingredients of a challenging year, particularly since the UK was expected to leave the EU at the end of March.

The European banking sector was also expected to remain a challenge, even though the European Central Bank was finally ending its €2.5trn asset purchase program having started it all the way back in 2015.

Despite the underperformance of 2018 the underlying performance of UK banks in terms of their day to day business on a domestic level hasn’t been that bad, with decent profits in 2018, with the trend continuing into the first half of 2019.

On the downside investors still had the same concerns about rising consumer credit, further provisions for PPI, as well ascontinued pressure on margins as a result of narrowing rate differentials, but overall the UK banking sector has been able to cope quite well with the uncertainty that has been a hallmark of 2019, and three extensions to the Brexit deadline.

In Europe there has been some progress on the problem of bad loans, however the economic slowdown seen throughout the region this year has meant that progress has been glacial, with the budget stand-off between the European Commission and the Italian government still unresolved as we head into 2020.

This has meant that progress on cleaning up the banking system elsewhere in the region has taken longer to put into place with the banking system in Greece still struggling to find ways to recapitalise itself, without wiping out its capital buffers.

Germany’s biggest bank, Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn) has continued to navigate its way from one crisis to the next with new CEO Christian Sewing trying to extricate the bank from various scandals involving money laundering, as senior board members came under scrutiny from regulatory officials.

The share price for Deutschefell back to new multi-year lows earlier this year with management continuing to cut jobs and costs in order to return the bank to a sustainable business model. There has been continued talk of a possible merger with Commerzbank (DE:CBKG), a ridiculous notion given the size of the two banks.

For all the supposed benefit a merger would give, both parties would have to undergo extensive due diligence, which might uncover all manner of hidden horrors. This is perhaps why the merger fell through, in that all the assets and liabilities would probably have had to be marked to market.

In any case the resulting bank would be an even bigger problem for the German taxpayer as opposed to two big ones. A merger also wouldn’t resolve the underlying problem of a German banking sector hamstrung by negative rates, as well as too many banks, and too many branches.

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In terms of overall performance the European Banks index (green line) has outperformed its UK counterpart despite the problems of Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn), however that’s not as positive as it looks given that the sector traded close to a seven year low in August this year.

Despite the Brexit uncertainties UK banks haduntil last Thursday broadly traded sideways for a lot of this year, albeit with a slightly negative bias. This changed last Friday with a sharp spike and while the share price performance has been underwhelming, the overall performance in the round has once again been encouraging, despite some weak spots as a result of another round of PPI provisions.

Another drag on UK bank share performance has been the insistence of the Bank of England that they hold more regulatory capital in respect of recent rises in consumer credit, particularly in car loans and credit card debt, as well as making sure they have adequate buffers for a disruptive Brexit.

This year the price performance of all the major banks has been much better, however that needs to be set into the context of a 2018 that saw all of them all fall by between 10% and 20%.