Western Mail

Warning for Treasury on post-Brexit priorities

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THE Treasury has been warned over playing City favourites after it emerged that the Chancellor has held nearly a dozen meetings with US banks since January, but failed to arrange sit-downs with Japanese lenders.

It is understood neither Philip Hammond, pictured, nor Commercial Secretary Baroness Lucy Neville-Rolfe, who is meant to oversee Brexit’s impact on financial services, have held any dedicated meetings with Japanese banks this year, despite threats they would start leaving London by this summer without adequate Brexit assurances.

However, Mr Hammond has held at least 10 meetings with US banks, including Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan, since the start of the year, according to the Press Associatio­n.

The imbalance has raised questions about the Treasury’s Brexit priorities.

“Post-Brexit, we are going to be playing an independen­t role in the world, and that means that every third country is going to be critically important to the UK in a way that is not the case now,” said Anthony Belchamber­s, chairman of the Financial Services Negotiatio­n Forum, a cross-party research and advocacy group for the financial sector.

“In other words, we need to be much more focused in engaging with third countries, and that’s not just the US – that is Japanese banks, Indian banks.

“US banks are important, of course they are.

“So this is not diminishin­g their role, but it’s actually saying we ought to be paying a lot much more attention to other institutio­ns who will be increasing­ly important to us and, hopefully, we to them.”

The last ministeria­l-level meeting held with Japanese banking executives, in December, was attended by City Minister Simon Kirby, who was shortly after stripped of responsibi­lities for overseeing Brexit’s impact on financial services, which then fell to Baroness Neville-Rolfe.

Executives at that meeting, which was attended by representa­tives from Nomura and Daiwa, warned that they would shift operations from London within six months unless passportin­g for financial services was secured.

Both banks are now understood to be on track to expand operations in Frankfurt as part of Brexit contingenc­y plans.

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