British pound plummets as Brexit alarm spreads

British pound plummets as Brexit alarm spreads
An electronic display board shows the exchange rate for pound sterling to the Euro and other currencies outside a money exchange store in central London on June 25, 2016, following the pro-Brexit result of the UK's EU referendum vote. (AFP / NIKLAS HALLE'N)
Updated 27 June 2016
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British pound plummets as Brexit alarm spreads

British pound plummets as Brexit alarm spreads

LONDON: Britain battled to stop worldwide Brexit alarm Monday as sterling crumbled to a three-decade low against the dollar, while bank, airline and property shares plummeted.
Other world markets steadied a little after Britain’s June 23 vote to abandon the European Union wiped $2.1 trillion off international equity values Friday.
Analysts warned of a volatile period ahead as global investors grappled with the financial consequences of the Brexit referendum.
“Today I want to reassure the British people, and the global community, that Britain is ready to confront what the future holds for us from a position of strength,” Britain’s finance minister, George Osborne, declared before European financial markets opened.
Britain’s economy is “as strong as could be,” the minister said.
The pound skidded to $1.3222 in morning London trade, its lowest level against the dollar since September 1985.
London’s FTSE 100 index, which boasts many international companies, fell 1.5 percent in morning trade, masking steeper falls in key sectors likely to be affected by Brexit.

Top businesses consider relocating
“George Osborne’s comments have clearly prevented a much more dramatic decline Monday morning, but markets will remain incredibly volatile throughout the long-winded process of exiting the EU,” said Interactive Investor equity strategist Lee Wild in London.
British budget airline EasyJet, which warned of a Brexit hit to sales, fell 16.0 percent. International Airlines Group, parent of British Airways and Iberia, dropped 9.4 percent.
Royal Bank of Scotland shares plunged 15 percent. Lloyds Banking Group fell 8.9 percent.
British construction group Taylor Wimpey tumbled 12.4 percent.
One-fifth of British business leaders are considering moving operations abroad after the referendum, according to a survey from leading business lobby group, the Institute of Directors.
In eurozone equity trading, Frankfurt’s DAX 30 index dipped 0.9 percent to 9,472.49 points and the CAC 40 in Paris shed 1.0 percent to 4,067.02.
In Madrid, shares eased, frittering away early gains after the ruling conservative Popular Party emerged on top in elections Sunday and vowed to try to form a government.

'Extremely vulnerable'
Stephen Innes, senior trader at OANDA Asia Pacific, warned sterling “is extremely vulnerable” and predicted an interest rate cut in the summer.
He also said there was “a huge concern that London’s status as the global financial capital will crumble” if it losses its “passporting” rights, which permit banks to locate themselves in Britain while offering products and services in the wider EU.
But on equities markets, the Nikkei in Tokyo, Shanghai and Sydney markets advanced. Hong Kong slipped, however.
There are fears the British vote will usher in another global market rout just months after a China-fueled sell-off at the start of the year.
Morgan Stanley economist Chetan Ahya tipped a new round of monetary easing in Asia to limit the fallout.
“We think near-term focus of policymakers will be to mitigate adverse impacts on financial conditions. Specifically, we expect policymakers to introduce liquidity injections measures,” he said.
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe held an emergency meeting with top officials Monday morning to discuss how to deal with the market fallout.
“It is going to be a very tough week,” predicted James Audiss, senior investment adviser at Shaw and Partners in Sydney.
“Unless an investor has a really strong view one way or the other, you’d be brave to buy in. It will be a really volatile week,” he said.
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said Britain’s departure from the EU created new uncertainties in the world economy at a time when downward pressures on China’s economy are mounting.