/ 5 October 2018

Bank warns no-deal Brexit could spark UK recession

The Edinburgh-based bank remains 62.4% owned by the government after it received a vast bailout during the global financial crisis.
The Edinburgh-based bank remains 62.4% owned by the government after it received a vast bailout during the global financial crisis. (Reuters)

A no-deal Brexit risks sending the British economy into recession in 2019, the head of the Royal Bank of Scotland warned on Thursday.

The lender’s consensus economic forecast for “next year says about 1.0-1.5 growth in the economy if we get an okay Brexit scenario,” chief executive Ross McEwan told the BBC.

“But if we get a very hard Brexit scenario … it actually will be less than that.

“And the economy may well go down to zero or negative growth next year if that Brexit relationship is very very harsh.”

This would hurt the bank’s profitability and share price, he cautioned.

The technical definition of a recession is two successive quarters of negative economic growth.

“If we don’t get the (economic) growth, that reflects into … the growth of our business which may be zero or negative,” the boss added.

The Edinburgh-based bank remains 62.4% owned by the government after it received a vast bailout during the global financial crisis.

In the face of Brexit uncertainty, RBS lending was becoming more cautious — while companies were also delaying investment decisions, according to McEwan.

“We are seeing the very large corporates just pausing in their investment into the UK because they are sitting saying: Do we wait for another six months to see what the outcome is? And that is what they are doing.

“And they can say: In six months’ time, we can come back and invest, or if things are really bad we will stay away from investing here.

“That is the reality of what is happening today,” he warned.

McEwan added that small businesses had “no impact on them whatsoever” and were continuing as normal because they are “very local businesses”.

He added: “It’s the larger businesses that are just paused. Because — do I invest here, do I invest in Europe or do I invest somewhere else. That’s the decision making process they are going through.”

McEwan had already revealed last month that RBS was planning for the worst amid increasing worries that Britain will exit the European Union in March without a deal in place with Brussels.

The bank is meanwhile setting up a new European subsidiary in Amsterdam to serve customers on the continent, and awaiting approval of its licences.

© Agence France-Presse