Friday 22 February 2019

Remain or leave? Carmakers confront hard Brexit choices

Business reporter(wp/reuters):::
 In three cavernous former Royal Air Force hangars at an old airbase in Wales, luxury carmaker Aston Martin is forging ahead with construction of a new vehicle assembly plant.
The paint shop is in, robots are being unpacked, and production of the company’s critical new sport utility vehicle is on track to start this year – Brexit deal or no deal.
“I still have to believe that we’ll get to a proper and right decision because a no-deal Brexit is frankly madness,” Aston Martin CEO Andy Palmer told Reuters at the company’s Gaydon headquarters in England, where designers are working on a diverse lineup of vehicles for the 2020s and beyond.
Headlines have focussed on plant closures and job losses ahead of Britain’s divorce from the EU.
Nissan has scrapped plans to build its new X-Trail SUV in the country, while Honda will close its only UK car plant in 2021 with the loss of up to 3,500 jobs - though it said the decision was not related to Britain’s exit from the EU.
However many auto companies - from luxury marques like Aston Martin to mass-market brands such as Vauxhall - are working on ways to survive after March 29.
On the outskirts of London, workers at Vauxhall’s operation in Luton are preparing to produce a new line of commercial vans following fresh investment from the brand’s owner PSA which they are counting on to sustain over 1,000 jobs.
While post-Brexit market conditions remain a big unknown, Vauxhall boss Stephen Norman told Reuters Britain’s exit from the European Union could present an opportunity to increase the brand’s market share. He is pursuing a marketing campaign to boost demand for the company’s modestly priced cars and SUVs.
The continued investment by some carmakers and the potential sales upside seen by Vauxhall reflect the conflicting decisions and opportunities that brands face depending on their size, their customers and where they are in the production cycle.
All automakers in Britain will anyway have to find ways make Brexit work, even if only in the short term. 
Nissan builds nearly 450,000 cars and multiple models, making it hard to pull out of the country any time soon. Toyota builds just one model in Britain, the Corolla, but has only just started making it - in an industry where vehicles tend to have a seven-year production life cycle.

RACKS OF DASHBOARDS

Aston Martin and Vauxhall are as different as two auto companies can be. Now Brexit has thrown Palmer and Norman into the same precarious boat as, like their rivals, they seek to minimise the potential harm of a disorderly British exit.
The two companies have significant British manufacturing operations and together have thousands of employees in the country. Palmer and Norman both said in interviews that the impact of Brexit would be more complicated, more pervasive and take longer to play out than policymakers and the public appreciated.
For Aston Martin, which sells sports cars at prices well above 100,000 pounds, new European tariffs on British-built cars are not a significant concern, Palmer said.
Like other smaller players such as Bentley, Rolls-Royce and McLaren, Aston has much larger margins on its cars and extra costs can be more easily passed onto wealthy customers. That’s not a luxury enjoyed by mass-market players.
What concerns Palmer more is the disruption to his company’s network of suppliers and its meticulously scheduled production system.
As he walks through Aston’s Gaydon factory, Palmer points to several rows of dashboards mounted on carriers and crowded into a corner of the plant.
Aston is building stockpiles of key parts in case an abrupt, no-deal Brexit results in trucks with components getting delayed by chaos at British ports. It is increasing the days of stock it holds from three days to five days and could fly in parts if ports become clogged up after March 29.
Aston receives many of its engines from a Mercedes-Benz factory in Germany, and new border checks and tariffs could delay those shipments.
Reverting to a regime of cross-border tariffs and World Trade Organization rules, after decades of free trade, would force Aston and its suppliers to trace and document where all the parts in a vehicle come from, Palmer told Reuters.
“When you’ve got 10,000 parts on a car and then you’ve got all of the sub-parts and the sub-parts, you quickly get up to hundreds of thousands of parts. And do you honestly know where they’ve all come from? Often not,” he said.
That’s one reason why Palmer said he hired a supply chain chief, an appointment announced last month. “His obsession right now is planning for Brexit,” he said.
The Brexit vote in mid-2016 came as Aston Martin was pursuing a multi-year strategy, unveiled in 2015, to go from making about 3,500 sports cars a year to building up to 14,000 sports cars and SUVs annually.
The St Athan plant will start building DBX SUVs, and then is expected to begin assembling a new line luxury electric vehicles under the Lagonda brand early in the 2020s.
Scrapping that investment is not Aston’s plan.
“People have asked me: what keeps you awake?” Palmer said. “It very much is the supply chain and the capability of that supply chain to absorb all the macroeconomics that are thrown at them.”
Aston is not alone in this concern: Volkswagen, the biggest car seller in Britain, and Honda have both said they are stockpiling parts while Jaguar Land Rover has been talking to warehousing companies and Bentley has leased storage space.

IN CHAOS, OPPORTUNITY?

At Vauxhall, boss Norman said Brexit could be an opportunity for a brand that struggled under its former owner, U.S. automaker General Motors, and is charting a new strategy under French group PSA.
Vauxhall believes a no-deal Brexit would lead to as much as a 20 percent fall in British new vehicle demand but a bigger market share for Vauxhall.
PSA has committed last year to fresh investment to launch new models at its Luton van factory. But it faces a decision next year on whether to keep Vauxhall’s Ellesmere Port plant open after the current run of Astra Sports Tourer ends.
That decision is not a simple one, Norman said.
“It would not be true to say that a hard Brexit automatically means the closure of plants in the United Kingdom, neither for us, nor for other manufacturers, but it would certainly mean they come under greater scrutiny,” he said.
British workers would have to deliver productivity gains that offset tariffs and supply chain friction.
Currently Vauxhall, which was bought by Peugeot parent company PSA in 2017, accounts for 7.5 percent of British car sales.
Added to the group’s Peugeot, Citroen and DS brands the total rises to 13 percent, making PSA one of the biggest sellers in Europe’s No.2 auto market.
If the market takes a hit, Vauxhall’s emphasis on functional, economically priced models could be an advantage, Norman said.
“People will look very long and hard,” he said. “And they will say: do I need this enhanced brand strength which I’m actually paying for that has no material value or should I not look more seriously at the offer from Vauxhall ... and have just as good a vehicle and not have to pay through the nose for the privilege.”

UK posts record budget surplus in January, boosting Hammond before budget update

Business correspondent:::
Britain posted its biggest budget surplus on record in January despite a slowing economy, putting finance minister Philip Hammond on course to announce the lowest annual borrowing since 2002 in a fiscal update due just before Brexit next month.
Britain ran a surplus of £14.895 billion in January, official data showed, the highest since monthly records began in 1993 - and above all economists’ forecasts in a Reuters poll.
The budget deficit looks on track to drop to its lowest since 2001/02 at just over 1 percent of national income this financial year, down from a towering 10 percent just after the global banking crisis in 2009/10.
The public finances have so far withstood the weakest economic growth since 2012 last year, as worries over Britain’s planned exit from the European Union mounted and the global economy slowed.
A 14 percent jump in income and capital gains tax payments in January reflected earnings in 2017/18, when economic growth was stronger.
Economists expect Britain’s independent budget forecasters to predict a rise in borrowing in the coming financial year when Hammond gives his fiscal update on March 13, barely two weeks before Britain is due to leave the EU.
Slower economic growth since Hammond made his full budget statement in October is expected to push up borrowing projections for the next couple of years.
But Hammond is still likely to have around £15 billion of headroom to meet his goal of keeping borrowing in 2020/21 under a self-imposed cap of 2 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), said Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics.
Hammond, under pressure for more public spending after years of austerity, has said he could use that headroom to ease any Brexit shock to the world’s fifth-largest economy.
“With the economic outlook highly uncertain at present, next month’s Spring Statement probably will be a holding operation,” Tombs said.
NO-DEAL BUDGET RISK
A no-deal Brexit would throw all the forecasts out of the window. Prime Minister Theresa May is still struggling to get parliamentary backing for the transition deal she struck with Brussels last year.
On Wednesday, Fitch Ratings said it could cut its double-A credit rating for British government bonds due to the higher risk of Britain crashing chaotically out of the EU.
For now, however, the budget figures look good.
Borrowing in the first 10 months of the 2018/19 financial year came to £21.2 billion, just over half the figure at the same point in the previous tax year. Hammond looks set to meet his goal of limiting borrowing to £25.5 billion.

That said, the Office for Budget Responsibility, which produces the forecasts that underpin Britain’s budgets, said there was “significant uncertainty” about the target.

Britons seemed to be paying income tax earlier this year, accounting for some of January’s revenue surge, it said.
Public debt is also falling as a share of gross domestic product and is at its lowest level since May 2012 - excluding distortions from a temporary Bank of England lending scheme - at 74.0 percent of GDP or £1.597 trillion.
This debt is not unusual for advanced economies, though it is double its share of GDP compared with before the financial crisis, and the finance ministry worries that rising debt would limit its room for manoeuvre in future crises.

No-deal Brexit would take a chip off UK home values - Reuters poll

Business reporter(wp/reuers):::
Britain’s over-valued housing market will undergo a modest correction if the country leaves the European Union at the end of next month without a deal, a Reuters poll found, with London being affected to a greater degree.
Negotiators are still scrambling to reach agreement, and if they fail then home prices in the capital, which has long been a magnet for foreign investors, will fall 3 percent in the six months after the March 29 split.
Nationally, prices will drop 1 percent, the Feb. 13-20 poll found.
“There will be a palpable shock to the UK economy in terms of GDP, inflation, job creation etc,” said Tony Williams at property consultancy Building Value.
He says prices in the capital would fall 10 percent if there were no deal, the most pessimistic forecast.
“This will spill over dramatically to the residential market, with London bearing the brunt given the international catchment of prospective buyers.”
(Graphic: Reuters Poll: Post-Brexit UK house prices outlook link: tmsnrt.rs/2Elx9kZ).
Since the June 2016 referendum decision to leave the EU, Reuters polls have consistently said a no-deal scenario would knock the economy, equities, housing market and sterling.
However, a dip in the currency - a recent Reuters poll said sterling would fall 5-10 percent if there was no agreement - would make property cheaper for foreign investors, likely offsetting some of the uncertainty.
If an agreement is reached, and most economists think it will be, house prices will rise 1.5 percent nationally and 0.5 in London in the six months after.
The wider poll of 25 market watchers said national home prices would rise 1.5 percent this year and 1.8 percent in 2020, both weaker than forecast three months ago. In 2021 they are expected to increase 2.3 percent.
In London prices are predicted to fall 2.0 percent this year, much sharper than in the last poll, and then rise 0.5 percent and 2.5 percent in the following two years.
“Prices have clearly come off the boil of late but on the assumption that the UK does not leave the EU without a deal, there is scope for the resumption of a modest upward trend,” said Peter Dixon at Commerzbank.
Reflecting the uncertainty, the range of forecasts for 2019 was wide, between a 3 percent fall and a 0.5 percent rise. Nationally, it was even wider - ranging from a 3 percent rise to a 3 percent fall.

OVERVALUED

With uncertainty still surrounding the Brexit outcome, nine of 16 respondents said they think turnover in London homes will fall this year while only two expected a rise. Nationally, 10 said turnover would stay the same, six said fall and two said rise.
“Sales levels will likely stay the same in 2019 as 2018 across the UK although this will vary across the regions,” said Leslie Schroeder at property consultancy Carter Jonas.
“We expect that London and the South East will see a slight fall in overall levels compared with 2018, again as affordability weighs heavily on the ability for average UK earners to move and buy houses.”
When asked to describe the level of London house prices on a scale of 1 to 10 from extremely cheap to extremely expensive, the median response was 8. Nationally they were rated 7, where it has been for a few years.
Those high ratings are unsurprising as the annual average British salary is around 30,000 pounds but the average asking price for a home in Britain was 300,715 pounds this month and more than double that in London, property website Rightmove said.
So although borrowing costs are currently very low and not expected to rise much in the coming years, prospective buyers trying to get on the property ladder will struggle as prices continue to rise, despite them increasing more slowly this year and next than wages and general inflation are predicted to.
“The fundamentals of the UK housing market remain as they are: lack of supply; a growing population; cheap money - a Brexit of any flavour will not dent those fundamentals,” said Russell Quirk at online estate agent eMoov.

UK retailers curb investment plans ahead of Brexit - CBI

Business reporter(wp/reuters):::
Although retailers were the most upbeat about the general business situation in over two years, Brexit and longer-term structural changes were casting a shadow, according to the quarterly survey from the Confederation of British Industry.
The investment intentions balance plunged to -33 in February from -3 in November, the lowest since February 2012, when Britain’s economy was still trying to shake off the after-effects of the global financial crisis.
The survey’s employment balance was its weakest since August 2017 at -30.
Numerous surveys have shown businesses are holding off on investment while Britain remains at risk of leaving the European Union on March 29 without an interim trade deal.
Official data for the three months to December published earlier this month showed the biggest fall in overall business investment since 2010.
“Until politicians can agree a deal that commands a majority in parliament, is acceptable to the EU and protects our economy, business despair will deepen. A deal must be negotiated, and no-deal averted,” CBI economist Anna Leach said.
Retailers face the additional challenge of fierce online competition, leading to companies such as Marks & Spencer and Debenhams shutting stores and others such as Toys R Us UK and electronics retailer Maplin going out of business.
The CBI said February’s monthly sales growth balance held at January’s reading of zero - above a two-year low recorded in December but below its average for most of 2018.
But retailers were more upbeat about the prospects for March, with the strongest outlook since 2015 - though in January they had been similarly upbeat about this month.
Since then, official data has shown strong retail sales growth in January, helped by bigger than normal discounts on clothing.
Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics said the CBI data was often more downbeat than the official numbers.
“The continued weakness of the reported sales balance in February should be taken with a pinch of salt,” he said, pointing to improving consumer finances despite a more general economic slowdown ahead of Brexit.
Stronger growth in wages, continued job creation and low inflation was boosting spending power, he said.

Britain's Metro, Starling, ClearBank win cash to fund small businesses

Business correspondent(wp/reuters):::
Britain’s Metro Bank, Starling Bank and ClearBank have been granted a total of 280 million pounds from a fund that aims to boost competition in lending to small firms.
The funds from the Banking Competition Remedies (BCR) scheme that was set up last year seek to help startups and online-only banks wrest business from established rivals such as Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), Lloyds and Barclays.
After assessing bids for the funds, the BCR said it awarded Metro Bank 120 million pounds, Starling Bank 100 million pounds and ClearBank 60 million pounds. ClearBank teamed up with Tide, a business banking service provider.
“It’s a relief to see this funding is now finally being handed out after a lengthy application process,” said Mike Cherry, national chairman of the Federation of Small Businesses.
The awards can only be spent on improving the financial products and services that are available to small and medium-sized companies, rather than day-to-day operations.
The cash came from RBS as part of the 775 million pound scheme requiring the bank to boost competition in the sector as a condition of its bailout during the 2008 financial crisis.
BCR said it received 16 applications from six applicants and further grants would be awarded later this year.
The grant offers some respite for Metro, which last month said its risk-weighted assets had risen by about 900 million pounds, ramping up pressure on its core capital ratio and sending its shares to a record low.
Metro, whose shares rose 4.4 percent, said on Friday that it would use the money to open new branches in northern England.
CYBG bank said its application was unsuccessful, sending its shares down 5.5 percent at 186 pence.
UBS cut its price target for CYBG to 193 pence from 200 pence, saying the failure to secure a grant posed a “downside risk” to its cost reduction plans. “We had expected CYBG to receive at least 60 million pounds of the fund given its strong presence in the SME market,” UBS said in a note.
Some 425 million pounds has been earmarked for banks to build business account offerings. Smaller banks can bid for a separate 350 million pound pool to encourage firms to switch accounts from RBS to a competitor.
RBS had originally been obliged to spin off its Williams & Glyn banking division that focused on small businesses, a scheme it abandoned as unworkable after spending more than a billion pounds on the project.

Ninth MP quits Labour Party

Political reporter(wp/reuters):::
British lawmaker Ian Austin resigned from the opposition Labour Party on Friday, the ninth person to do so this week, saying it was “broken” and had been taken over by the “hard left”.
Austin said he was appalled at the treatment of Jewish lawmakers who had taken a stand against anti-Semitism and that the “the party is tougher on the people complaining about anti-Semitism than it is on the anti-Semites.”
“The Labour Party has been my life, so this has been the hardest decision I have ever had to take, but I have to be honest and the truth is that I have become ashamed of the Labour Party under (leader) Jeremy Corbyn,” he told the Express and Star newspaper.
“I could never ask local people to make Jeremy Corbyn Prime Minister.”
Corbyn has promised to drive anti-Semitism out of the party.
A Labour spokesman said the party regretted that Austin had decided to leave.
“He was elected as a Labour Member of Parliament and so the democratic thing is to resign his seat and let the people of Dudley decide who should represent them,” he said.
Austin said he did not currently have any plans to join The Independent Group in parliament, launched by seven of his former Labour colleagues on Monday and since joined by an eighth as well as three former members of the governing Conservatives.
A Labour lawmaker since 2005 and a former government minister, Austin supports Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal and is not in favour of holding a second referendum, putting him at odds with the other Independent Group members.

'No deal in the desert,' EU says of Brexit breakthrough in Egypt

Political reporter(wp/reuters):::
European Union leaders will not clinch a deal on Brexit during a summit with their Arab peers in Egypt scheduled for Sunday and Monday, an EU official said on Friday.
“There will be no deal in the desert,” the official said when asked about chances of a Brexit breakthrough during the EU summit with the League of Arab States in Sharm el-Sheikh on Feb.24-25.
However, the source said European Council President Donald Tusk would hold a bilateral meeting with British Prime Minister Theresa May on the sidelines of the summit on Sunday at 1630 local time in Egypt.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Dutch Prime Minsiter Mark Rutte are among more than 20 EU leaders expected to go to Egypt. London hopes May will have a chance there to lobby again for concessions that will unlock Brexit ratification in Britain’s divided parliament.
EU diplomats say there has been some movement towards a possible deal with London but stressed that much work remained to be done and were not expecting any imminent breakthrough.
However, sterling weakened on Friday after the EU official ruled out a weekend deal.