Matthew A Winkler
Published:25 Jun 2021, 11:46 AM
Brexit five years after referendum shows no gain, just pain
It's been five years since UK citizens voted to exit the European Union and almost 200 days since they belatedly departed. The decision looks to be working in the UK's favor, at least on the surface.
The economy will grow 6.4pc in 2021, second-best among the Group of Eight developed countries, followed by a G-8 leading 5.4pc gain in 2022, according to the median estimate of 60 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The iShares Core FTSE 100 UCITS ETF, the largest exchange-traded fund investing in the UK, shows record appetite for British equity, with money flows surging 126pc since 2016 to an all-time high, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
“This country will prosper mightily,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson said after his December deal to leave the EU.
Johnson's seeming prescience and all that cash flowing into UK ETFs is belied by deteriorating productivity, the country's eroding global trade and no sign the pound will rebound enough to erase the massive depreciation in sterling, which has been the worst performer among 10 major currencies since the referendum on June 23, 2016. Whatever strengths Britain musters through the end of next year will be fleeting because the economy already is a shadow of its once mighty self before Brexit was decided.
In the first hour after polls closed on that second-to-last Thursday in June, the pound rallied to $1.50 from $1.48 on speculation that the British people would accept the consensus view of domestic and international prime ministers, presidents, finance ministers, business leaders and economists and vote to remain in the EU. The market expected the UK to support remaining because it was widely perceived to be the best outcome for the UK Once the “leave” votes exceeded the “remain” votes, sterling plummeted a record 8.05pc to a then 31-year low of $1.3229.
The pound's 6.3pc depreciation against the dollar since the referendum made sterling the sick man among major currencies. Denmark, which unlike Britain never wavered in its commitment to the EU, continues to benefit from membership: the krone leads the foreign-exchange market with a 4.9pc gain since June 2016. That's slightly better than the No. 2 euro, shared by 19 countries, which has appreciated 4.8pc. Not even the pound's 23pc rally from the pandemic-era low of $1.1412 in March 2020 can offset its relative weakness.
For an island nation historically steeped in global commerce, the UK saw business with its biggest trading partner drastically curtailed. Trade with the EU tumbled 21pc since 2018 to $38.7 billion, the least in 11 years. In contrast, fervently pro-Europe Ireland and Denmark increased their trade with the EU by 24pc and 5pc. Britain's international trade declined 14pc since 2018 as total world trade shrank 8pc, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
For much of the 21st century, the UK -- abetted by London's command of international financial services -- was the G-8 leader in terms of economic growth, and was No. 1 in 2014, and No. 2 in 2015 and 2016. The referendum transformed Britain into an also-ran, with UK GDP growth sinking to No. 6 in 2017 and 2018, No. 5 in 2019 and most likely worst in 2020. Even if the forecasts are right and Britain rebounds to No. 2 in 2021 and No. 1 in 2022, it will revert to a snail's pace of 1.8pc in 2023, not much better than Japan's 1.2pc, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey, in his first public comment since Britain completed its Dec. 30 withdrawal from the world's biggest trading bloc, told the House of Commons in January that GDP will be as much as four percentage points lower in the years ahead than it would have been had the country remained in the EU.
While Britain is diminished, Greece is the opposite: eschewing rejection of the euro, embracing EU membership and rebounding from a debt crisis and depression caused by the financial crisis. Greece's economic growth will exceed the EU's advance of 4.4pc by almost a percentage point in 2022 and continue to outperform in 2023, according to 18 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Total trade between Greece and the EU increased 16pc since 2018.
The stock market performance of UK real estate companies, traditionally leaders among those in 16 western European countries, is anemic since the referendum. During the five years prior to the 2016 vote, UK firms gained 154pc on average, the No. 4 total return (income plus appreciation) out of 124 publicly-traded real estate companies in the western European countries. The UK group slipped to No. 6 during the past five years, with a 74pc total return, trailing the overall group's 106pc, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The relative weakness of UK real estate companies is exacerbated by their steep valuations, trading at prices that are on average 36 times their future per share earnings, the highest for Europe and 41pc greater than the average for the region. The UK ratio is also 32pc greater than the second-most expensive country, Switzerland.
``One reason for the disparity could be that investors are looking further ahead at the rebound in rental income which may be more pronounced in the UK peers,'' said Sue Munden, a Bloomberg Intelligence European property analyst.
Corporate Britain, meanwhile, continues to be less competitive. UK companies' sales per employee, a measure of productivity, totaled $2.4 million, or No. 6 among 20 western European countries in 2015. That was 13pc above the region's average. In the most recent year, revenue per employee declined to $1.3 million, or No. 12, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Booming British ETF money flows mask another reality check: UK shares remain underwhelming, reflected in the inferior return of 31.5pc for the MSCI UK Index compared with 96.3pc for the MSCI All-Country World Index since June 23, 2016.
Brexit in its infancy is proving to be of no benefit to anyone save the politicians who championed it. If anything, markets have determined five years after a majority of Britons voted against their own interest that Brexit is undermining historic advantages in London-based financial services and disrupting EU commerce, which accounts for about 50pc of British imports. The meaning of Brexit is no gain, just mostly pain.
* Matthew Winkler, Editor-in-Chief Emeritus of Bloomberg News, writes about markets