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Brexit Bulletin: Seeking the Saudi Prize

Brexit Bulletin: Seeking the Saudi Prize

Aramco sure would be a nice post-Brexit trophy for the London Stock Exchange. Even in Saudi Arabia, it was all about Brexit. Prime Minister The

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Xavier Rolet, chief executive officer of London Stock Exchange Group Plc, left, attends a meeting between U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May and Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz at Al-Yamamah Palac in Riyadh

Aramco sure would be a nice post-Brexit trophy for the London Stock Exchange.

Even in Saudi Arabia, it was all about Brexit. Prime Minister Theresa May’s trip to the kingdom had a clear goal: bolster London as a financial center just as Brexit threatens to undermine it.

At her side for much of the trip was London Stock Exchange Group CEO Xavier Rolet, Alex Morales reports from Riyadh. The pair made the case for state oil giant Saudi Aramco to pick London for its initial public offering. With a potential valuation of more than $1 trillion — or $2 trillion, according to Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman — the listing would be a triumph for post-Brexit London.

Rolet was there at all the key moments. He was one of the first people to greet May off the plane; he joined her for a meeting with Aramco and sat next to her at a round-table gathering of finance executives. He reappeared at King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud’s palace and was the first person May introduced to the monarch. He also saw her off.

The LSE could use a boost after the collapse of its tie-up with Deutsche Boerse, a deal that would have provided a degree of protection against Brexit. Now the Frankfurt-London truce has come to an end. Deutsche Boerse is back in competition with LSE for the clearing business, which has become a political as well as financial battleground as European officials want it removed from London.

Who’s Got More to Lose?

Back in Europe, the 28-nation parliament in Strasbourg set its conditions for a Brexit deal, while chief negotiator Michel Barnier rebuffed once again May’s call for a quick start to trade talks. Barnier said it would be risky to try to do exit and trade talks at the same time. He said the divorce bill had to be sorted first. That reduces the window the U.K. has to negotiate the “bold and ambitious” deal May wants.

Bloomberg’s Dara Doyle has taken a closer look at what’s really at stake and which side has most to lose in trade negotiations. It’s the U.K., according to the numbers.

  • In dollar terms, almost 50 percent of U.K. exports go to the EU. Only 6 percent of EU exports go to Britain.
  • Germany buys 11 percent of U.K. exports; the U.K. accounts for only 7 percent of German exports.
  • About 6 percent of French exports go to the U.K.

Brexit Bullets

  • Standard Life Plc is considering making Dublin its new hub inside the European Union, chairman says in interview
  • Britain is getting tough on financiers and their tax arrangements, just as European cities are trying to lure them
  • Dutch airline KLM calls for compromise as it boosts flights to London City
  • BMW AG’s U.K. workers called for their first strikes in more than two decades
  • Ferrovial puts brake on U.K. investment, Spain’s El Confidencial reports
  • Poland wants the EU and U.K. to hold talks simultaneously on divorce and future ties.

On the Markets

The pound could weaken as far as $1.15, according to Goldman Sachs, which says it’s more bearish than others about the impact of Brexit on sterling.

Meanwhile, the Bloomberg Brexit Barometer rose slightly as data showed the U.K. services sector expanded more than forecast in March. The barometer increased to 39.7, or “partly cloudy.”

And Finally…

Majestic Wine has a solution for the Brexit blues. As the plunge in sterling makes imported wine more expensive and inflation squeezes disposable incomes, Majestic is launching a range of wine at less than £6 a bottle.

 

 

 

bloomberg.com

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