The Pak Banker

Brexit poker begins: UK ramps up no-deal preparatio­ns

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Britain went into Tuesday's fresh round of Brexit trade talks with a warning to the European Union that it was ramping up preparatio­ns to leave without an agreement as both sides bickered over rules governing nearly $1 trillion in commerce.

Britain left the EU on Jan. 31 but talks on new trade terms have made little headway as the clock ticks down to an October deadline for a new deal and then the end of the status-quo transition arrangemen­t in late December. As diplomats try to gauge whether Prime Minister Boris Johnson is blustering or serious about allowing a tumultuous finale to the four-year Brexit saga, his chief negotiator said yet again that Britain was not afraid of a no-deal exit.

That prospect scares business and weakened the British pound on currency markets. "We have now been talking for six months and can no longer afford to go over well-trodden ground. We need to see more realism from the EU about our status as an independen­t country," David Frost, Britain's top Brexit negotiator, said in a statement.

"If they can't do that in the very limited time we have left then we will be trading on terms like those the EU has with Australia, and we are ramping up our preparatio­ns for the end of the year." The EU warned Britain on Monday that its internatio­nal reputation as a pillar of the West would be tarnished and that there would be no trade deal after the Financial Times reported that London might simply undercut the Withdrawal Agreement treaty signed in January.

Britain said it was committed to the treaty but that it needed minor clarificat­ions and a backup plan to support the 1998 Northern Ireland peace deal. European diplomats said Britain was playing a game of Brexit chicken by threatenin­g to collapse the process and challengin­g Brussels to compromise first. Some fear Johnson may view a nodeal exit as useful distractio­n from the coronaviru­s crisis. Irish Prime Minister Micheal Martin said Britain's trade talks with the EU would be pointless if the Brexit withdrawal agreement it signed up to is not implemente­d in full,

"The withdrawal agreement is an internatio­nal treaty and we expect the UK government to implement and to adhere to what was agreed. We trust them to do so or they would render the talks process null and void," Martin told the Irish Examiner. The latest round of negotiatio­ns in London are likely to be tough: Britain says the EU has failed to understand that it is now an independen­t country - especially when it comes to fishing and state aid.

The EU, weary of wrangling over Brexit, says it needs specifics from London and that Britain cannot make its own rules and have preferenti­al access to its markets. As Johnson says mid-October is the deadline for a deal, diplomats said the public posturing was to be expected. "As you get closer to the deadline, it's not surprising people ramp up the pressure," one EU diplomat said. "We all believe there has been movement by the EU towards the UK position, but it hasn't been reciprocat­ed, and that's the concern.

"So, time is running out. If we are to get the deal that everybody wants, given the number of open issues and given the amount of time left, any deal is looking thinner and thinner." Without agreement, trade and financial ties between the world's sixth largest economy and its biggest trading bloc would be thrown into disarray, spreading havoc among markets and businesses.

Brexit nerves boosted sterling-dollar implied one-month volatility to 10% for the first time since mid-June. "We want to leave with a Canada-style free trade arrangemen­t that's always been our preference and we think that's still possible," British Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick told Sky News when asked if he was looking forward to a no-deal Brexit.

"But... if they don't show the degree of flexibilit­y and realism that we want them to show... then we'll leave with the kind of trading arrangemen­ts that Australia and other countries have and we think that's also a good arrangemen­t for the future." Australia is negotiatin­g a free trade deal with the EU to improve its market access, but for now largely trades with the bloc on World Trade Organizati­on terms.

Meanwhile, Sterling sank to twoweek lows against the dollar on Tuesday, extending losses as fears grew that Britain is preparing to undercut its Brexit divorce treaty and potentiall­y torpedo its trade talks with the European Union.

The latest round of negotiatio­ns starts on Tuesday but the EU has warned there there will be no trade deal if Britain tries override parts of the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement it signed in January, jeopardisi­ng the whole treaty and creating frictions in Britishrul­ed Northern Ireland.

Tensions have flared anew even as clock ticks down to an October deadline for a new deal and then the end of the status-quo transition arrangemen­t in late December.

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