Bank stocks and financial sector exchange traded funds were the biggest losers in U.S. markets as traders weighed the potential years of uncertainty in response to the passing “Brexit” referendum.
Broad financial sector ETFs came under fire Friday. The Financial Select Sector SPDR (NYSEArca: XLF) fell 4.9% iShares U.S. Financials ETF (NYSEArca: IYF) dropped 4.5% and Vanguard Financials ETF (NYSEArca: VFH) decreased 4.5%. Additionally, bank specific plays such as the SPDR S&P Bank ETF (NYSEArca: KBE) declined 6.7% and PowerShares KBW Bank Portfolio (NYSEArca: KBWB) retreated 6.9%. In contrast, the S&P 500 index dipped 3.2%.
Related: At Risk Sector ETFs in a Brexit Vote
U.S. markets slipped on a global risk-off trade, with the financial sector among the worst performers, after the United Kingdom’s surprised markets by voting to sever ties with the European Union.
The passing Brexit vote pommeled bank valuations from Europe to Wall Street with large operations in London and pushed job security fears to financial crisis lows as observers believed the financial industry would cut U.K. operations in response, Reuters reports.
Related: 10 ETFs Hit the Hardest in ‘Brexit’ Fallout
The referendum casts uncertainty over the U.K.’s financial services industry outlook and the country’s ability to sell export in the European Union.
The European Union previously stated that U.K.-based firms could lose free market privileges after a Brexit, which could prompt banks to shift operations out of the U.K. and into E.U. member states to serve E.U. clients.
[related_stories]London has acted as one of the world’s preeminent financial hubs and allowed banks a kind of “passporting” right which let firms reside in the U.K. and sell their products and services throughout the E.U.
“The city is not going to lose the financial leadership of Europe, it’s too far ahead, but a lot of that lead is going to get eroded,” Ewen Cameron-Watt, chief investment strategist at BlackRock Inc, told Bloomberg. “They’re going to go to Dublin or Frankfurt or Paris.”
For instance, Morgan Stanley President Colm Kelleher said earlier that leaving the E.U. would cause the bank to move its local headquarters to Dublin or Frankfurt and to relocate 1,000 employees, or one-sixth its U.K. workforce. Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) shares plunged 9.6% Friday.
For more information on the financial sector, visit our financial category.
Financial Select Sector SPDR