Investment Strategies
An Independent Scotland Would Have No Good Currency, Banking Choices - SocGen

If Scotland chooses to be an independent country its currency options and banking regime choices will be difficult, and none of them particularly credible, Societe Generale warns.
There are no appealing currency options for an independent
Scotland if voters decide to leave the United Kingdom, ending
over 300 years of union with England, the private bank of
France’s Societe Generale says.
The economic stakes around any “yes” vote for independence have
been brightly highlighted by announcements this week from three
of the UK’s largest financial firms (Lloyds, Royal Bank of
Scotland and Standard Life) that they will switch headquarters
and major operations south if Scotland takes this course.
A particularly vexed issue, as highlighted by the travails of the
eurozone (as in the Greek situation) is whether one can have
currency union without a high degree of political union. Alex
Salmond, Scotland’s First Minister and leader of the Scottish
National Party, has claimed Scotland will be able to continue
using sterling post-independence, but his views are challenged by
other mainstream parties and the governor of the Bank of England,
Mark Carney.
Alan Mudie, head of investment strategy for Societe Generale
Private Banking, cast doubt on the currency options that Scotland
has when he spoke to this publication recently. He said there are
four options: continued use of sterling but no control over
rates, debt or use of a central bank; currency and banking union;
a new Scottish currency, and membership of the euro.
On the monetary/banking union option, this has been explicitly
rejected by the Conservative, Liberal Democrat and Labour Parties
in the UK, Mudie said. He said the eurozone experience of
currency union without full political union should be a
chastening one.
On what is called “sterlingisation” – using the pound but without
controls over debt, rates or the central bank, this would be a
temporary situation as Scotland would not have control over the
levers of policy and it would be hard to reconcile with the
supposed point of independence, which is running one’s own
affairs. Some people have drawn parallels with such arrangements
used by jurisdictions such as Panama. These are unwise since
Scotland, relative to the rest of the UK, is bigger than Panama
relative to the US.
An adopting the euro, Mudie was blunt:“This is a non-starter;
Scotland would not automatically be able to enter the EU.” A
condition of rejoining the EU would be euro adoption after a
certain period of time and to do that Scotland needs to meet the
Maastricht debt and deficit criteria; however, Scotland is some
way off doing that.”
Mudie said the idea of a new, Scottish currency is is the most
consistent option from the point of view of being an independent
country. “The country will need a central bank able to act as a
lender of last resort.
However, it is the most complex solution for a country of
Scotland’s size, making it difficult to set up quickly,” he
said.
“An option might be to adopt some sort of sterling peg/currency
board arrangement for a transitional period, but this also
requires the country concerned to adopt strict policy rules,
which might be difficult,” he said.
Asked about broader issues from the vote, Mudie said if people
vote against independence but the result is close, this will
leave a period of continued volatility. A “yes” vote will see
further downward pressure on the pound and UK gilts; such falls
in sterling – and possible negative effect on other assets –
might, however, encourage foreign buyers of assets, he said.
Mudie joined Societe Generale Private Banking in May 2014 from
UBP in Switzerland, where he had been CIO of Private Banking
since 2011, following a period at Syz & Co, initially as CEO of
Oyster Funds and then as Head of the Fund Research department. He
has also worked at BNP Paribas and Crédit Agricole and Barclays
Bank.