Carney warns of 'no-deal' Brexit house price crash:
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[September 14, 2018]
By Costas Pitas and David Milliken
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's property
market would crash and mortgage rates spiral up in the event of a
chaotic no-deal Brexit, with house prices falling 35 percent over three
years, Bank of England Governor Mark Carney told ministers, The Times
newspaper reported.
The United Kingdom is due to leave the European Union on March 29 and
yet little is clear. There is, so far, no full exit agreement between
Brussels and London and some rebels in Prime Minister Theresa May's
Conservative Party have threatened to vote down a deal if she clinches
one.
Details of Carney's briefing to the cabinet on Thursday were reported by
British newspapers including the Financial Times, The Times and the
Guardian. The Bank of England declined to comment and the exact context
of Carney's remarks is unclear.

According to The Guardian, Carney warned the ministers, including May,
that the impact of a chaotic no-deal Brexit could be as catastrophic as
the 2008 financial crisis.
Speaking at the Irish central bank on Friday, Carney did not directly
address the media reports but reiterated that the BoE had tested banks
against "very severe" scenarios including "dramatic house price falls"
and much higher interest rates.
"That's not a prediction of what's going to happen, but that (stress
testing) is what we need to do in order to make sure that ... the system
is ... able to continue to lend," he said. "Our job, after all, is not
to hope for the best but to plan for the worst."
The BoE has long said its bank stress tests represent worst-case
scenarios rather than forecasts of likely outcomes.
Many business chiefs and investors fear politics could get in the way of
Brexit, thrusting the world's fifth largest economy into a "no-deal"
divorce they say would weaken the West, spook financial markets and clog
up the arteries of trade.
Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab was due to speak by phone to EU chief
negotiator Michel Barnier on Friday.
In recent months, May's government has stepped up planning for a no-deal
Brexit and has underscored the disruption that such a move would cause
to businesses and the public.
Without a deal, the UK would move from seamless trade with the rest of
the EU to customs arrangements set by the World Trade Organization for
external states with no preferential deals.
In one note of optimism, Carney said that if May struck a Brexit deal on
the basis of her "Chequers" proposals then the economy would outperform
current forecasts because it would be better than the bank’s assumed
outcome, the FT said.
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Mark Carney, Governor of Bank of England leaves Downing Street in
London, Britain, September 13, 2018. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

BREXIT CRASH?
Carney, whose term of office was this week extended until the end of
January 2020 to deal with Brexit disruption, told ministers a chaotic
exit would lead to a plunge in sterling that would drive up inflation
and interest rates, The Times said.
Further, the Bank of England would be unable to soften the crisis by
cutting interest rates because of the inflationary impact of such a
move, Carney told ministers, according to the Financial Times.
If Carney's worst-case scenario were to come to pass then such a crash
in house prices would spell political death for any prime minister,
though there was scepticism about the reports from his opponents and
some economists.
"Carney has made himself a laughing stock in the City with such an
outrageous warning," said Richard Tice, a Brexit supporter who is co
chair of the "Leave Means Leave" group.
"Carney is a political central banker who is talking down the country
and talking down Brexit in the hope that people accept a really bad
Brexit deal - May's Chequers deal."
UNRELIABLE BOYFRIEND?
Carney, sometimes nicknamed the "unreliable boyfriend" due to mixed
signals about the future path of interest rates, gained respect from
some investors for his actions to calm markets in the immediate
aftermath of the 2016 Brexit vote.

Britain's central bank stress-tested lenders against a 33 percent house
price fall last year and some economists questioned whether Carney's
comments to ministers had been reported accurately.
"Carney reported comments on UK house prices not remotely credible BUT I
also think highly unlikely they were made as reported," said Simon
French, chief economist at Panmure Gordon merchant bank in London.
UK house prices fell 19 percent peak to trough during the 2008 financial
crisis but then rose by 38 percent from their low in March 2009 to June
2016, the month of the shock Brexit referendum result.
(Additional reporting by Padraic Halpin in DUBLIN; Writing by Guy
Faulconbridge; Editing by Andrew Heavens and Toby Chopra)
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