Pound Rally Limited On Brexit Redo

 | May 24, 2019 07:04AM ET

The long drawn out process for Theresa May to resign is over. PM May’s emotional speech at the doorsteps of 10 Downing Street delivered the news she will step down on June 7th. After three failed Brexit deal votes in Parliament and a fourth pitch that was dead on arrival, May had no choice but to resign.

May’s election that she called in 2017 was her biggest mistake that ended with her losing her majority and thus only having a minority government to push forward on Brexit. The problem for the next leader going forward is that the Parliamentary arithmetic is the same, EU negotiations will restart, and the British people’s frustration of Brexit angst will grow.

Now we will hear from all the candidates and markets will now try to price in the risks of a no-deal Brexit. The front-runner is Boris Johnson and if that is occurs, we could see the hardest Brexit outcome. Conservative lawmakers will hold secret votes to trim the list of interested candidates down to until two emerge, which should occur within two weeks. Then the Conservative Party, which holds about 124,000 members will vote over the next month.

Even if we do end up seeing Boris Johnson become the new PM, he will face a majority in Parliament that is against a no-deal, based on the March 27th vote of 160 to 400. One possible scenario is that we see a divisive leader in office, who will not have a majority, ruffle some feathers and have MPs push forward a vote of no confidence which could see a trigger for a general election. The other growing scenario is that we could see the new leader avoid a general election and put Brexit up to a second referendum asking for a no-deal or to remain.

Uncertainty is elevated, and the British pound volatility should grow. Since no-deal chances are increasing, we should see sterling’s rally capped.

BOE – Hasta la vista rate hike bets

Oil – Small bounce following two-day rout

Gold – Still unattractive

BOE

With uncertainty remaining high on who will become the UK’s next leader, the short-end rates curve has pretty much seen all rate hike bets erased. If we see a hard exit, rate cut bets will grow rapidly and for now, the BOE will need to be on hold and wait until we see the next leader’s plan.