'Short' pound bets fade three weeks before Brexit
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[March 08, 2019]
By Saikat Chatterjee
LONDON (Reuters) - With three weeks to go
before Britain is due to exit the European Union, interest in selling
the pound against the dollar and euro is dwindling as currency traders
bet that the worst-case scenario of a no-deal Brexit will be averted.
Overall positioning still implies a degree of caution about the outcome.
But with parliament expected to extend the date of Brexit beyond March
29 rather than let Britain crash out of the EU without a transition
period to minimize economic disruption, the pound has surged to
multi-month highs in recent weeks.
It is up 7 percent against the dollar year-to-date, making it the
world's best performing major currency.
Various positioning gauges meanwhile indicate that selling sterling in
anticipation of being able to buy pounds back later at a lower price --
"shorting" -- is becoming less popular.
According to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which
measures changes in investor positioning, speculators had a net $3.2
billion short position on the pound versus the dollar on Feb. 25. That
is half the $6.5 billion hit in September 2018 and well below the $4.84
billion seen on Dec. 21, before the U.S. federal government shutdown.
CFTC offers the most reliable and frequent update of investor positions
though its data measures only a tiny fraction of the market.
CFTC data was unavailable for some weeks due to the shutdown, and while
figures are now trickling out, more up-to-date positioning indicators
compiled by banks and funds show short positions are gradually being
washed out.
BNP Paribas's FX positioning tracker, for example, shows that on a scale
of +50/-50, sterling 'shorts' were completely pared back in the week to
March 4 for a score of plus 4, versus minus 5 the previous week. The
score had ended 2018 at -30 and was -18 in the week to Jan. 21.
Separately, analysis by RBC Capital Markets of third-party flows data
shows pound buying surged in two distinct rounds recently, especially
against the euro, FX quantitative trader Robert Turner said.
"We've seen a huge amount of interest in buying sterling through our
positioning monitor recently," Turner said. "Most of the interest is in
playing sterling strength versus the euro, rather than dollar."
The first round was in the week of Jan. 21 and the second occurred on
one day, Jan. 25, as markets ramped up expectations that a no-deal
Brexit would be avoided. Purchases eased off after that but picked up
again last week, he added.
Investors had a small euro long position versus the pound in early 2019
of +11 percent, swinging to a record short of -100 percent on Feb. 27.
The current score is -78 percent, RBC said.
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British five pound
banknotes are seen in this picture illustration taken November 14,
2017. REUTERS/ Benoit Tessier/File Photo
(GRAPHIC: RBC Positions and Flows - https://tmsnrt.rs/2ESpk6D)
Similarly, Nomura's positioning metrics indicate that net short sterling
positions have declined to near their lowest levels this year, with a
net short bet of less than $3 billion. At end-2018, net short positions
amounted to $4.5 billion.
The sizeable drop in overall short pound positions gels with a
reassessment of the chances of a no-deal Brexit -- major banks,
including Deutsche and Goldman Sachs now assign just a 10-15 percent
probability to that 'worst-case' outcome.
NOT CHEERFUL YET
Investors are far from cheerful on the pound's prospects, however --
short positions at end-February, according to the CFTC, were well above
a five-year average of $2.7 billion.
"There is a bit of optimism on the pound on hopes that a hard Brexit is
avoided but the nature of any delay in the Article 50 process, or even
an acceptance of May's deal, introduces new possibilities and risks for
investors to consider," said UBS FX strategist Lefteris Farmakis.
Postponing the date of Britain's planned departure or a tilt toward a
softer Brexit than envisaged in May's deal would open up the prospect of
fresh negotiations between London and Brussels, dampening any knee-jerk
rally.
Caution is also evident in options markets where investors have reduced
their Brexit hedging or speculative bets, but not fully, according to
traders.
Another index, compiled by currency fund Millennium Global Investments,
shows pound positioning at -0.9 on a scale of -5/+5. It was -1.4 a week
ago and around -1.7 a month earlier.
(GRAPHIC: GBP positioning from Millenium -
https://tmsnrt.rs/2EUXUNC)
"Our positioning indicator shows positioning is still short as there is
still a bit of uncertainty," said Claire Dissaux, Millennium's head of
global economics and strategy.
"The Parliament has ruled out a no-deal Brexit but there is still the
risk of domestic instability, as we have seen the parties split and an
election still possible."
(Reporting by Saikat Chatterjee; Additional reporting by Sujata Rao;
Editing by Catherine Evans)
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