London traders brace for biggest night
since 'Black Wednesday'
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[June 15, 2016]
By William James, Freya Berry and Patrick Graham
LONDON (Reuters) - The world's biggest
banks including Citi and Goldman Sachs will draft in senior traders to
work through the night following Britain's referendum on EU membership,
set to be among the most volatile 24 hours for markets in a quarter of a
century.
A vote to leave the European Union on June 23 would spook
investors by undermining post-World War Two attempts at European
integration and placing a question mark over the future of the
United Kingdom and its $2.9 trillion economy.
Citi, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, HSBC, Barclays, Royal
Bank of Scotland and Lloyds are among those banks planning to have
senior staff and traders working or on call in London as results
start to dribble in after polls close at 2100 GMT, according to the
sources.
Jamie Dimon, chief executive officer of JPMorgan Chase & Co, told
employees on a visit to Britain this month that if the vote was to
leave the EU, the bank would have to have "teams of people thrown on
what that means".
"We won't know what it means: there is a wide range of outcomes,"
Dimon, a supporter of Britain's membership who has warned of job
cuts at JPMorgan in Britain if there is an Out vote, said in the
broadcast speech.
A vote to leave could unleash turmoil on foreign exchange, equity
and bond markets, spoiling bets across asset classes and potentially
testing the infrastructure of Western markets such as computer
systems, stock exchanges and clearing houses.
Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen has cautioned that a Brexit vote
could shake financial markets and potentially push back the timing
of the next rise in U.S. interest rates.
Bank of England Governor Mark Carney has said sterling could
depreciate, "perhaps sharply" and some major banks have forecast an
unprecedented fall to parity with the euro and as low as $1.20 in
the days following any vote to leave the bloc.
The Bank of England will be staffed overnight, with senior
policymakers on call if markets go into meltdown. The finance
ministry would not comment on its staffing plans.
The official Vote Leave campaign argues there is no evidence that
leaving the EU would weaken sterling long term, while Nigel Farage,
leader of the UK Independence Party has said that even if the
currency did fall, it would simply boost British exports.
BREXIT NIGHT?
Sterling - the world's fourth most traded currency - has moved
sharply in recent weeks, often on the back of opinion polls.
Depending on the results from across the United Kingdom, the night
of June 23 and early morning of June 24 could rank as one of the
most volatile nights in the history of the London market.
"We've all seen U.S. elections, UK general elections, we've had the
Scottish referendum, the collapse of Lehman and QE (Quantitative
Easing) but this is by far and away the biggest risk event that has
presented itself to the UK," said Chris Huddleston, head of money
markets at specialist bank Investec.
London accounts for 41 percent of global turnover in the $5.3
trillion-a-day foreign exchange market, more than double the
turnover in the United States and far more than the 3 percent of its
closest EU competitors, France and Switzerland.
"All the traders are going to be in ... They don't like missing big
moments, if there's going to be one, they want to be at their desk,"
said a senior source at a major bank based in the Canary Wharf
financial district of London.
Some banks are planning the night down to the smallest detail to
keep their traders on top form - laying on all night catering and
booking nearby hotels to offer temporary respite.
"It is the biggest planned risk event that anyone can remember, so
everyone is going to be involved. The question is just when you try
and get some sleep," said one senior foreign exchange trader.
No exit polls are planned by British broadcasters so the first
numbers from the counts will be turnout results from 382 different
areas followed by totals for 'Remain' and 'Leave' in each area.
[L8N1920W5]
STERLING
Polls have given contradictory pictures of British public opinion,
keeping markets guessing on the final outcome.
That has left sterling, currently priced at $1.41, far away from
either of its likely resting places after the final result is known
- seen by banks as around $1.50 in the event of a remain vote, or
$1.30 or lower if Britain votes to leave.
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The Canary Wharf financial district is seen at dusk in east London,
Britain November 7, 2014. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
That almost-certain rapid repricing could set the scene for one of
the rockiest sessions since traders wrestled down the value of
sterling on Black Wednesday, September 16, 1992, when Britain
crashed out of the European Exchange Rate Mechanism.
"If it's Brexit, then we're looking at something that's at least on
the scale of Black Wednesday," said Nick Parsons, global co-head of
FX strategy at National Australia Bank and a veteran of the 1992
sterling crisis.
Prices for derivatives used to mitigate the risk of sharp swings in
sterling point to a period of intense volatility.
Officials and bank managers planning for the event draw comparisons
with the 40 percent surge in the Swiss franc in January 2015, which
bankrupted dozens of small investment funds and cost banks including
Citi hundreds of millions of dollars.
Traders and analysts told Reuters they would expect a Brexit vote to
cause sterling to 'gap', or plummet lower - as orders to sell the
currency met an absence of willing buyers, leaving a blank spot on
the price charts snaking across traders' screens.
Gaps can inflict huge losses on banks and traders, forcing them to
bail out of trades at prices far below the automatic sell orders, or
'stops' they normally use to limit losses.
Currency market participants have urged the Bank of England to call
on U.S. Federal Reserve if the turbulence gets really bad. The BoE
could buy sterling with dollars borrowed directly from the U.S.
central bank under arrangements first used in response to the global
financial crisis in 2008.
Carney has said the Bank would not stand in the way of any exchange
rate adjustment but would take the necessary steps to ensure markets
remained orderly. It has not commented on whether or how the bank
might intervene.
"MONEY TO BE MADE"
A senior source at one London bank said his firm had been building
big reserves of sterling to lend out to any clients who get caught
short by swirling asset valuations that require them to post extra
security deposits with their trading partners.
Foreign exchange brokers such as PhillipCapital UK and Saxo Bank
have raised the security deposit they demand from clients in order
to trade, a step designed to offset the increased risk that
customers get caught out by sharp moves.
One asset manager who declined to be named said his firm had run a
test to see if it could cope with a 30 percent fall in sterling. The
fund had increased its cash holdings and would have traders working
overnight, ready to sell other assets in case it needed to raise
more cash in a hurry.
Volatile markets not only put traders under pressure: they test the
limits of the technology that underpin the market.
A source at the London Stock Exchange said volatility could spike on
June 24 and that it was putting in emergency capacity for
transaction reporting to cope with any spike in trading volumes that
might otherwise overwhelm its systems.
A spokesperson for LSE declined to comment.
Despite facing a battle against surges in trading volumes, volatile
prices and, at times, the absence of enough buyers or sellers to
meet demand, some traders are rubbing their hands at the prospect of
a night and day of high drama.
"You look forward to days like this," said one bond trader at a
major London bank. "There's money to be made and lost ... You've
just got to hope you're on the right side of it, not the one being
carried out the door."
(Additional reporting by Jamie McGeever, Anirban Nag, John Geddie,
Dhara Ranasinghe, William Schomberg, Anjuli Davies, Andrew Macaskill,
Lawrence White, Simon Jessop, Marc Jones and Maiya Keidan, Editing
by Guy Faulconbridge and Philippa Fletcher)
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