Brexit Compendium
June 20th, 2016 5:50 am-
Previous polls showing ‘Leave’ ahead sparked market turmoil
-
Odds tracker shows chances for Brexit dropping to about 30%
The pound climbed the most since 2008, spurring a global rally in higher-yielding currencies, as polls signaled the campaign for the U.K to stay in the European Union was gaining momentum.
Sterling’s volatility diminished as surveys taken after the murder of pro-EU lawmaker Jo Cox showed “Remain” gaining lost ground. A poll from Survation taken June 17-18 for the Mail on Sunday newspaper showed “Remain” backed by 45 percent and “Leave” by 42 percent, reversing positions from Survation’s previous poll. The pound gained at the end of last week after campaigning for this Thursday’s referendum was suspended following Cox’s death. She was attacked June 16.
“Weekend polls suggested the tragic death of Jo Cox may be shifting some support back to “Remain” — that has helped risk sentiment a bit,” said Robert Rennie, the global head of currency and commodity strategy at Westpac Banking Corp. in Sydney. “The polls are also driving the move away from safe-haven currencies.”
Risk On
Sterling climbed 2 percent to $1.4648 as of 9:23 a.m. in London, the biggest gain since December 2008, after advancing 1.1 percent on Friday to complete its first weekly advance this month. A one-week gauge of implied volatility for the pound versus the dollar dropped to 37.2 percent from a record close of 47.9 percent in the previous session.
Hedge funds and other large speculators have cut bets on a sterling decline versus the dollar, known as net shorts, in the week ended June 14 from a three-year high the previous week, according to data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in Washington.
Among the other currencies gaining on Monday as the probability of Brexit was seen to decline:
- The euro rose 0.7 percent against the dollar, the most in more than two weeks
- Norway’s krone and Sweden’s krona jumped at least 1 percent against the dollar
- The Aussie and kiwi strengthened at least 0.9 percent
- The yen retreated 0.4 percent, set for its first decline in seven days
- Eastern European currencies surged, with the Polish zloty rising 0.7 percent
For a quick view of recent Brexit surveys, click here
A JPMorgan Chase & Co. index of Group-of-Seven currency volatility has declined to 11.6 percent, after closing at 12.8 percent on June 14, a level unseen since December 2011.
U.K. government bonds fell for a second day. The Bank of England and International Monetary Fund reiterated warnings last week about the economic risks of Britain quitting the world’s largest single market.
Prime Minister David Cameron entered the final week of campaigning ahead of the referendum with an accusation that his opponents are trying to deceive people into voting to leave. Campaigning had been suspended for two and a half days following Cox’s murder, Sunday saw both sides return to the fray.
The probability of a vote to leave has declined to about 30 percent from almost 40 percent on June 15, according to bookmaker figures processed by the Oddschecker website.
A survey by YouGov Plc for the Sunday Times, a third of which was conducted before the attack, showed “Remain” at 44 percent and “Leave” with 43 percent. The pollster said it doubted the rise in backing for the EU was tied to Cox’s killing and suggested it may relate more to concerns about what Brexit would mean for the economy.
“The markets have always been more comfortable with the U.K. remaining in the European Union, hence the boost to risk sentiment now that the ‘Remain’ camp’s campaign appears to be back on track,” Kathleen Brooks, London-based research director at Gain Capital Holdings Inc., wrote in a note.