Johnson’s controversial Brexit stand-off could prompt exodus of wealth

September 11, 2020

By George Prior

Boris Johnson’s controversial plans to rewrite parts of the Brexit withdrawal agreement could trigger a “significant exodus of wealth” from the UK, warns the CEO of one of the world’s largest independent financial advisory and fintech organizations.

The warning from Nigel Green, the chief executive and founder of deVere Group, comes as the EU demands the UK scraps plans to change the Brexit deal “by the end of the month” or risk a total collapse in trade talks.

Mr Green says: “Johnson’s plans to modify the Brexit agreement that his government agreed and signed upon in January has sparked an intense diplomatic war of words.

“The EU is now saying no trade talks will take place, and therefore no chance of a deal, unless the UK pulls back from its recently revealed proposed Internal Market Bill.”

He continues: “This highly controversial move by Johnson has considerable and far-reaching consequences and it could trigger a significant exodus of wealth from the UK for two key reasons.


Free Reports:

Get our Weekly Commitment of Traders Reports - See where the biggest traders (Hedge Funds and Commercial Hedgers) are positioned in the futures markets on a weekly basis.





Download Our Metatrader 4 Indicators – Put Our Free MetaTrader 4 Custom Indicators on your charts when you join our Weekly Newsletter





“First, the breaking of an international treaty will compromise credibility and trust in investing in the UK.  Investment goes where there is certainty, stability and reliability.

“Reneging on a major trade deal at the last minute is not going to attract much-needed foreign direct investment into Britain.  Investors will look elsewhere rather than investing new money into the UK.”

Mr Green goes on to add: “Second, the uncertainty will make the UK and international investors already invested in UK-based financial assets increasingly nervous.

As such, they can be expected to take precautionary measures to insulate themselves against a potential fall in the value of said assets.

“A growing number inevitably, and quite sensibly, are likely to be looking to grow and safeguard their wealth by moving assets overseas through various established international financial solutions.”

The deVere CEO concludes: “It appears Johnson is on a collision course with the EU by breaking international law.

“This undermines confidence and credibility in the UK to current and potential domestic and overseas investors who are looking for a safe jurisdiction to invest.”

About:

deVere Group is one of the world’s largest independent advisors of specialist global financial solutions to international, local mass affluent, and high-net-worth clients.  It has a network of more than 70 offices across the world, over 80,000 clients and $12bn under advisement.

InvestMacro

Share
Published by
InvestMacro

Recent Posts

5 ways data centers endanger their local communities and the country as a whole

By Neha Gour, George Mason University; Ed Maibach, George Mason University, and Luis Ortiz, George…

20 hours ago

China has shifted to using its own strategic oil reserves

By JustMarkets  On Monday, the US stock indices showed mixed dynamics, with the technology sector…

21 hours ago

GBP/USD Remains Under Pressure Despite Attempts to Recover

By Analytical Department RoboForex GBP/USD attempted to move closer to 1.3350 on Tuesday but remained…

21 hours ago

SpaceX IPO: Set for $75 billion liftoff

By ForexTime  SpaceX IPO scheduled for Friday 12th June  $75 billion capital raise forecast –…

2 days ago

On Friday, the American stock market experienced one of the strongest crashes in recent times

By JustMarkets On Friday, the American stock market went through one of the harshest crashes…

2 days ago

EUR/USD at April Lows: What’s Next for the Pair?

By Analytical Department RoboForex EUR/USD began the new week at 1.1520. The US dollar ended…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.