Iran Daily

Over 400 firms in UK shifted to EU after Brexit: Study

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More than 400 financial firms in the United Kingdom have shifted activities, staff and a combined trillion pounds ($1.4 trillion) in assets to hubs in the European Union due to Brexit, with more pain to come, according to a new study by the New Financial think-tank.

“We think it is an underestim­ate and we expect the numbers to increase over time: we are only at the end of the beginning of Brexit,” the study published on Friday said.

The EU has offered the United Kingdom little in the way of direct market access for financial services, which were not included in the bloc’s trade deal with the UK that came into effect in January, Al Jazeera reported.

“That access is unlikely to be forthcomin­g, so it is perhaps better for the industry to take the damage from Brexit on the chin and focus instead on recalibrat­ing the framework in the UK so that it is more tailored to the unique nature of the UK financial services industry.”

Some 7,400 jobs have moved from the UK or been created at new hubs in the EU, the study said. Bankers have told the Reuters news agency that some staff moves have been delayed due to COVID-19 travel restrictio­ns.

The total of 440 relocation­s is higher than anticipate­d and well above the 269 in New Financial’s 2019 survey. New Financial believes the real number is well beyond 500.

Dublin has emerged as the biggest beneficiar­y with 135 relocation­s, followed by Paris with 102, Luxembourg 95, Frankfurt 63, and Amsterdam 48.

“This redistribu­tion of activity across the EU has wound the clock back by about 20 years,” the study said.

Banks have moved or are moving more than 900 billion pounds ($1.2 trillion) in assets from Britain to the EU, while insurers and asset managers have transferre­d more than 100 billion pounds ($138bn) in assets and funds, reducing the UK tax base.

“We expect Frankfurt will be the ‘winner’ in terms of assets in the longer-term, and that Paris will ultimately be the biggest beneficiar­y in terms of jobs,” the study said.

Amsterdam’s toppling of London as Europe’s biggest share trading center since January has been the most visible sign of Brexit in finance.

The study expects that 300 to 500 smaller EU financial firms may open a permanent office in the UK, far fewer than the prevailing forecasts of about 1,000.

The City of London will remain the dominant financial center in Europe for the foreseeabl­e future, but its influence will be chipped away, risking a reduction in the UK’S 26 billion pounds ($35.8b) annual trade surplus in financial services with the EU, according to the study.

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