UK business backs May’s Brexit deal but plans for the worst

Published November 17, 2018
A pro-Brexit supporter stands with a placard demanding to leave the European Union immediately near the Houses of Parliament in London on November 16, 2018. — AFP
A pro-Brexit supporter stands with a placard demanding to leave the European Union immediately near the Houses of Parliament in London on November 16, 2018. — AFP

LONDON: UK business lined up to help Prime Minister Theresa May sell her draft Brexit agreement but continued to plan for Britain to crash out of the European Union without a deal as May fought for her political survival on Friday.

“This agreement is only a draft,” Chief Executive Warren East told BBC radio on Friday.

“We are going to continue with our contingency plans and that includes buffer stocks so that we have all the logistical capacity that we need to carry on running our business.”

Manufacturers like Rolls-Royce fear that new customs duties and red tape that would kick in if Britain leaves the European Union without a deal on March 29 would kill the just-in-time delivery of thousands of parts on which they depend.

May’s spokeswoman pointed to “strong support from the business community” as her office released statements from a number of major companies, including Diageo, the London Stock Exchange and Royal Mail.

The political turmoil is roiling markets, putting sterling through its worst day since 2016 on Thursday.

The pound stabilised on Friday as May clung onto power, and UK shares staged a fragile comeback thanks to mining and oil stocks, but Brexit-sensitive banking and housebuilding stocks came under renewed pressure.

Investment bank Bernstein said the UK market might now be “uninvestable” as the most extreme outcomes were not yet priced into the value of shares.

“We think that the UK market might be ‘uninvestable’ in the specific sense that the near term movement is likely to be dominated by political forces that, bluntly, are very hard to model,” the bank wrote in a note.

“On a longer horizon uncertainty seems likely to hang over the UK for some time to come.” One chief executive of a services company that employs tens of thousands likened Brexit to a major business transformation that requires a long-term strategic vision and an acknowledgment that the first few years will be tough before it gets better.

“We have not had that,” he told Reuters on condition of anonymity. “Politicians on all sides think tactically and for the short term. There is no strategic vision, and business is watching on and thinking: ‘Oh my god, where is the plan?’”

“Right now it is an executional mess and I don’t think politicians are equipped to get us through it.”

Published in Dawn, November 17th, 2018

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