What Brexit? Investors warm to UK stocks as M&A surges

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Kit Rees

The benchmark and mid cap 250 index both bounced back in May from lows hit in March, undaunted by two critical Brexit-related events - a vote on the withdrawal in parliament next week and a summit of the bloc's leaders at the end of this month.

Investors are reconsidering the attractions of UK-listed equities relative to those in the zone for a combination of reasons. Sterling remains almost 10 percent below where it was before Britons voted to leave the EU in 2016, helping exporters and boosting London-listed firms' foreign earnings.

On top of that expectations of a long-awaited interest rate increase by the are receding and stock valuations are relatively attractive. The disproportionate weighting in FTSE indexes of and firms has also helped due to and metals prices.

At the same time, the re-emergence of political uncertainty in and has encouraged investors to reassess their zone holdings.

While euro zone stocks ended May with a 2.5 percent loss, the was the best regional performer, gaining 2.2 percent and returning to positive territory for the year. It was down as much as 10 percent as recently as March.

In some respects, the FTSE is playing catch-up as it underperformed both continental European and U.S. stocks last year. But many investors who have been underweight UK stocks for some time have reconsidered relative positioning, regardless of Brexit and its uncertain consequences.

"The UK was more or less ticking all of the negative boxes which is why so many fund managers were underweight," Fabrice Theveneau, of equities at Lyxor Asset Management, said.

"Now it is progressively changing," he added, saying in a recent interview that his Lyxor Sustainable Equity fund has been reducing its underweight position on the UK market.

May saw the biggest back-to-back monthly increases in allocation to UK equities since before the Brexit vote, despite remaining "the consensus short", according to Lynch's latest fund

BAML's cross asset strategists have also rotated out of and into British equities, which they see as a better bet in the later stages of an economic expansion thanks to the market's large weighting in energy, materials and defensive stocks such as health and consumer staples firms.

DIVORCE TALKS

British equities have had a tough time amid uncertainty surrounding the EU divorce talks. So far 2018 has seen the demise of outsourcer as well as troubles for high street stalwarts Mothercare, and Debenhams, to name a few, as inflation puts pressure on consumer spending.

The comeback has been driven, or at least accompanied, by a flurry of M&A activity. This has hit an all-time year-to-date record in 2018 with the total value of UK deals standing at just over $260 billion, according to data from the Deals Intelligence team. https://tmsnrt.rs/2L8oWBe

Overseas buyers have been lured by the weak pound, with Takeda of acquiring pharma firm for $62 billion.

British supermarket Sainsbury's is also planning a $10 billion acquisition of Walmart's UK-based Asda, and group has bid for rival Virgin

Last month shares of rocketed after the serviced office provider said it had received takeover approaches from three suitors, while on Tuesday Rupert Murdoch's Fox received approval to buy on condition it sold

Theveneau said Lyxor Asset Management's biggest overall position in its portfolios is in

Some big names have also tempered their sell recommendations on UK equities. upgraded its view in May, while Deutsche Bank, and UBS all lifted their recommendations for UK stocks in April.

Justin Onuekwusi, at Legal & General Management, says his firm too has been reducing its underweight in UK stocks in its Multi-Index funds, although for risk-management reasons. Overall, Onuekwusi says that he is not all that positive on UK equities on a medium-term perspective.

"You've got Brexit hanging over the UK, and although we can debate the impact on long-term earnings of UK companies, the immediate transition mechanism for Brexit risk will be through the currency," said Onuekwusi.

"We expect sterling to continue to be volatile if there is uncertainty and that in turn will have an impact on the UK "

But some investors are hoping the worst is now over.

"Over the last two years domestic UK - particularly retail - has come under pressure in terms (with) lots of profits warnings and a few high-profile casualties," Stephen Macklow-Smith, of equity strategy at JPMorgan Asset Management, said. "We think there's scope for that to improve this year."

(Reporting by Kit Rees, Graphic by Ritvik Carvalho, Additional reporting by Helen Reid; editing by David Stamp)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, June 07 2018. 11:41 IST