and starts talking sense. Telling both the UK AND the EU, that the UK is, effectively, the Investment Banker for the whole EU. Take that away with a disorderly (and petulant on the EU side), exit and businesses throughout the EU are going to suffer. Implied in that is also that the UK is growing and the vast majority of the EU is either not growing or actively in recession, only propped up by those few countries which are growing faster than expected.
Of course the currency markets, primed to drop the value of the £, every time something other than positive news turns up, carved €0.1 from the value of the £. But that will probably recover when the inflation data comes out tomorrow and Friday.
It’s nice to see Carney focusing on the things the BOE need to focus on. Namely stopping outside interference from impacting the British economy and banking systems. Rather than blathering on about the “risks” of the people of the UK making a decision. Of which the biggest “risk” is that the BOE would actually have to do some work to help us over the hump of the change.
I do like the statement. It’s more like a financial equivalent of MAD. Perhaps we can call it MAP. Mutually Assured Pain!
It is no mistake that the UK is the investment banker for the UK. The laws and regulations which extend to the banking environments in the rest of the EU are draconian to say the least. Could you imagine being told that you can only withdraw £300 per WEEK, in cash, when on holiday outside the UK, from your _DEBIT_ card? This is standard practise in many French banks. As are monthly fees to hold a bank account and sundry other costs which we don’t have in the UK.
Restrictions on the banks and what they can invest in create costs, to businesses, which we do not find in the UK. For instance a subsidiary in the UK can, essentially, gamble on the currency and stock markets in a way that the parent in its home country cannot. In Germany the banks that went under did so because they bought US banks which gambled on Sub Prime loans and then funnelled their profits into those banks to gamble it. German law allowed them to transfer funds to subsidiaries but not to gamble directly from Germany.
This is quite visible with an example. ABN Amro bank, when I worked there in 2000, before RBS bought them, made 60% of their disposable profit in Treasury and Capital Markets through their wholly owned subsidiary in London. What is TCM? It is currency trading. Or in other words. Gambling on the currency markets.
I was involved in the size of one of these because we failed to send a confirmation mail within 24 hours (mail routing to the internet issue) and a trade was cancelled. The trader was furious because the trade was for $1.1 Billion. Due to the volatility of the exchange rates, he lost $11m of potential profit on that one trade, because it failed to go through. Imagine if it had gone the other way.
ABN, at the time and, as far as I know, to this date, makes a loss on ALL consumer banking and most of its business banking.
And this is the environment in which they believe they will lure all our investment and transaction banking?? They are determined too. Because if they strip the UK of our passporting rights, they can then impose the Transaction Tax, that Cameron vetoed and apply it to all the trades they “stole” from the UK.
Expect that little political hot potato to drive the negotiations for Brexit. In some ways UKIP is right. Leave, NOW, immediately, no A50, just out and make them face the chaos, starting on Monday. If we do that they will have no option but to give the UK devolved passporting rights. Well either that or their economies will descend into chaos.
Anything else and the EU will attempt to weasel their way out of any obligations and will try to bind the UK into totally unreasonable conditions of exit. Short term pain for long term gain. We won’t do it, but it would show the reality of the situation. It would probably hurt me a lot but I’d put up with the pain in order to make the gain for the UK.