gypsyjackson
Master Poster
Ironically, for me the 'what now' is to go to watch Independence Day.
Nan. I think it will barely be a single digit drop barely 1%/2% if at most. Market will continue to plunge fora few hours until people realize they can snap low price stuff and bet on global market not suffering much at least initially and the price will stabilize and rise again to reasonable amount.
At this moment it is just emotional. There is really no change. It was after all only a poll.
Now if brexit is enacted in law then in 2 years time or when real that ill be anotehr story.
The EU may need to trade with the UK but whilst the UK does 50% of their business with the EU, the EU does about 7% of their business with the UK.
A lot has fundamentally changed in the economy - we will no longer be part of the largest economic zone in the world. I will find out from my clients in the coming weeks and months whether I'll still have a business. Firms like Nissan will need to determine whether they continue to invest in the UK or whether they allow their UK operations to wind down and investment instead to go to their EU plants.
IMO when the rest of the EU starts to disintegrate again, financially and politically, the UK will look like a safe haven again.
One thing I did find interesting. I've heard it stated several times that "the EU is the U.K.'s largest trading partner". This is true—collectively. By individual nation, from the data I came across, the #1 purchaser of U.K. exports is the U.S.A., accounting for nearly 15% of total exports; China was at #4 with 6%. Seems to me that any loss of exports to the EU as a result of soured relations arising from the exit could be made up by increased exports to the U.S. and other non-EU countries, especially if some form of free trade deal is worked out.
I predict the pound will quickly return to pre-referendum levels.
So do I actually. IMO the Euro is fundamentally weaker and is actually in CTL+P mode with the ECB printing it 80billion a month currently.
its interesting that EURGBP hasnt moved that far considering, as the Euro has been walloped almost as much as GBP against the Dollar
Britain is narrowly on course to vote to stay in the European Union, five final opinion surveys suggested last night, as the polls closed and counting began in the most fiercely fought and significant referendum in a generation.
A YouGov poll of 5,000 people released at 10pm put Remain on 52 per cent (up one per cent on its last poll) and Leave on 48. An internal poll carried out by the campaign group Leave.EU of 10,000 people over the last 48 hours suggested the same headline result.
More wishful thinking. The EU will strengthen as a result of this outcome in my opinion. Let's wait and see.
Already heard that we should immediate scrap the "working hours directive"... Wonder how many people who have voted to leave are on "part time" contracts, shame they'd lose their paid holidays and sick leave....
...snip...
But speaking on Good Morning Britain, the Ukip leader said he could not guarantee it would be possible and the Leave campaign should not have said it.
...snip...
Yup, the predictable race to the bottom begins now......
Next to go will be environmental protections and health and safety in the workplace.
And this is the thing the starry-eyed optimists are ignoring. The departure of manufacturers when tariffs and other policies to "protect the UK" are put in place. "No impact" believers are living in fantasy land.
Not just outside EU countries. My employer, (German and a manufacturer of Wind turbines, railway systems CAT scanners) has said that it won't be investing in expansion plans if the UK left.
I wonder if anybody in this thread will be any better at predicting what happens next than they were at predicting what just happened.
Now what? Well, one would hope reasonable minds will come to reasonable accommodations. It need not be the end of the U.K. or the end of the EU, as some are seemingly fond of prognosticating.
There is much vested interest in keeping the economic gears turning, so either side getting pissy about the situation would seem counterproductive.
One thing I did find interesting. I've heard it stated several times that "the EU is the U.K.'s largest trading partner". This is true—collectively. By individual nation, from the data I came across, the #1 purchaser of U.K. exports is the U.S.A., accounting for nearly 15% of total exports; China was at #4 with 6%. Seems to me that any loss of exports to the EU as a result of soured relations arising from the exit could be made up by increased exports to the U.S. and other non-EU countries, especially if some form of free trade deal is worked out.
But there are good things to consider: after all we can immediately start building a new hospital every week, and pump millions and millions of extra cash into the NHS.......