J.P. Morgan is recommending a constructive stance on UK utilities amid heightened political uncertainty, arguing that market worries appear to be reflected in current share prices. The broker highlights investor concerns including potential nationalisation, changes to fiscal policy and upward pressure on gilt yields, but regards those risks as largely discounted by the market.
Within its sector framework, the firm is focusing on two investment themes: companies tied to electricity-network expansion and those with earnings that are resilient in a turbulent energy-price environment. On that basis, J.P. Morgan has assigned an "overweight" rating to three utilities: Centrica, SSE and National Grid.
Centrica
J.P. Morgan positions Centrica as its preferred defensive exposure in the UK utilities complex. The broker points to Centrica's linkage to wholesale power prices, which can underpin profits when energy markets are volatile. In addition, Centrica enters the current environment with what J.P. Morgan describes as an underleveraged balance sheet, offering a degree of protection against higher interest rates and broader market stress.
Given the potential for political-driven swings across UK assets, J.P. Morgan expects Centrica to show comparative resilience and to possibly outperform peer companies during periods of elevated market volatility.
SSE
SSE is identified as J.P. Morgan's top pick among UK utilities. The investment thesis centers on the company's electricity-network businesses. J.P. Morgan notes that rising power demand, the need to modernize grids and the integration of renewable generation require substantial capital expenditure, which in turn can expand SSE's regulated asset base.
That expanding asset base is expected to support long-term earnings growth. While political developments may create short-term noise, J.P. Morgan believes SSE offers the most compelling mix of growth potential and returns within the universe of UK regulated utilities, and explicitly prefers it to National Grid.
National Grid
National Grid is portrayed as a high-quality, defensive option with a diversified earnings profile. J.P. Morgan highlights that roughly half of National Grid's operating profit is generated in the United States, which reduces the firm's sensitivity to UK political developments and provides geographic diversification.
That geographic spread makes National Grid attractive to investors seeking stability amid domestic uncertainty. At the same time, J.P. Morgan expects slower growth at National Grid compared with SSE because National Grid's mix is more mature and oriented toward defensive returns. The stock remains rated "overweight" on account of predictable cash flows, regulated returns and a lower UK-specific risk profile.
Overall, J.P. Morgan's sector view privileges utilities with exposure to electricity-network investment or structural earnings resilience. The broker's overweight recommendations reflect a judgement that the market has already incorporated much of the political and macroeconomic uncertainty facing UK assets.