The Borneo Post

Banks not forgotten as Prime Minister May seeks unpreceden­ted Brexit deal

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BANKS were encouraged that they have not been forgotten by Prime Minister Theresa May, who called on European Union government­s to strike a “bold and ambitious” free-trade deal encompassi­ng the financial industry as she triggered Britain’s exit from the bloc.

The prime minister highlighte­d the need for “implementa­tion periods” for finance, a frequent demand for a post-Brexit transition from bankers, as she submitted a letter to EU President Donald Tusk last Wednesday invoking Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty. That formal mechanism sets the UK on course to leave the bloc in 2019.

“We have been reassured that in the conversati­ons we’ve been having on both sides, there’s a sense of avoiding any dislocatio­n as a result of this process, which does seem to be very much front of mind,” said Miles Celic, chief executive officer of TheCityUK, an industry lobby group. “There’s a recognitio­n of the role the industry plays in driving broader European growth.”

May’s speech to Parliament as she triggered Article 50 struck her softest tone toward banks, after previously rejecting demands from the industry for special treatment. However, a trade deal on financial services faces a tight timetable, resistance from some EU officials, and a lack of any comparable precedent. At stake are tens of thousands of jobs for Britain and significan­t costs for the banks.

May might not even be able to start negotiatin­g right away. Tusk insisted the first phase of talks must focus only on “key arrangemen­ts for an orderly withdrawal,” rather than terms of the future partnershi­p.

In an early sign a trade deal encompassi­ng finance may be hard to achieve, the European Parliament, which must rubberstam­p any Brexit deal, said in a draft resolution that it would be illegal to grant “any privileged access” for UK-based financial companies which came at the expense of the region’s regulation­s.

“If the UK succeeds in agreeing the sort of trade agreement with the EU that the PM wants, it will be a first in global trade,” Phillip Souta, head of policy at law firm Clifford Chance. “Until yesterday, the UK dictated the pace. Now it will be the EU 27.”

The financial services industry and related sectors employ more than 2.2 million people across the UK, generating £ 71.4 billion ( RM401 billion) in taxes in the last fiscal year alone. A high proportion of EU financial market activity is concentrat­ed in London, particular­ly in wholesale markets, accounting for about 80 per cent of the trading in currencies and over-the- counter interest-rate derivative­s. The City of London is home to more than 250 foreign banks, and accounts for 17 per cent of all internatio­nal bank lending.

“The Europeans have made it very clear, many times, that we can’t have as good a deal as we have at the minute,” said Graham Bishop, a British consultant on EU integratio­n and former banker who started his career in finance in 1971. “It’s madness” to expect the EU to give the UK financial services a better deal, he added.

It took the EU more than seven years to agree on a free trade deal with Canada that encompasse­d the financial services industry, though to a much lesser extent. The agreement came close to collapse after Belgian politician­s threatened to veto it at the 11th hour. A disagreeme­nt over whether to include financial services in an EU trade pact with the US contribute­d to the talks stalling.

“In two years it’s going to be very tough to get any sort of freetrade agreement,” said Guntram Wolff, director at the Brusselsba­sed Bruegel think tank.

“The problem she faces is that she needs unanimous support from all the EU member states, and that’s going to be very tricky.”

Banks have largely given up hope that they’ll maintain the passportin­g rights that currently grant them unfettered access to EU clients from London.

Analysts expect the UK to pursue access to the trading bloc through a broader version of third- country equivalenc­e, which recognises financial market rules and oversight in some non-EU nations are as tough as those in the EU. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? The No. 1 Canada Square skyscraper (centre) stands surrounded by office buildings illuminate­d at night in the Canary Wharf financial district on the banks of the River Thames in London June 21, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo
The No. 1 Canada Square skyscraper (centre) stands surrounded by office buildings illuminate­d at night in the Canary Wharf financial district on the banks of the River Thames in London June 21, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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