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A shopping list of Brexit’s damage to the City of London

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Canary Wharf
London’s Canary Wharf
financial district

REUTERS/Toby
Melville


  • Banks and financial firms that make up 6.5% of UK GDP have
    already taken precautionary measures to prep for Brexit, meaning
    a lot of damage is already done.
  • Banking is just the tip of the iceberg with many other
    industries also making irrevocable decisions

The damage to the economy from Brexit is already afoot — so much
so that the act of leaving the EU itself is, at this point,
increasingly irrelevant.

Leaders of companies with UK operations haven’t been taking any
chances. The mere whiff of uncertainty surrounding a soft, hard,
no-deal or any other Brexit has been enough to send them packing.
These moves won’t be undone, even if Brexit were somehow
cancelled.

The impact on the City of London could be especially damaging —
financial services, heavily concentrated in the capital, account
for 6.5% of the UK’s GDP.

“I don’t believe Brexit can be a trigger for a financial
crisis or a banking crisis,” Sergio Ermotti, CEO of Swiss
investment firm UBS,
told Bloomberg
back in September. “But it could undermine
investments, and trigger maybe a slowdown in the economy. That’s
clear.”  

Here’s a roundup of the financial exodus so
far: 

  • US bank giants Goldman
    Sachs, JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, and Citigroup
    have
    moved 250 billion euros ($283 billion) of
    balance-sheet assets to Frankfurt because of
    Brexit
  • Bank of America is
    spending
     $400 million to move staff and operations in
    anticipation of Brexit, and is trying
    to persuade 
    London staff to move to Paris. 

  • Barclays
     is seeking to transfer €250 billion
    ($280.8 billion) of business to Dublin and is set to
    become Ireland’s biggest bank
  • France’s BNP Paribas, Credit Agricole, and Societe
    Generale
    have opted to transfer
    500 staff out of London to Paris. 
  • UBS has chosen
    German financial center Frankfurt for its new
    EU headquarters.
     
  • Swiss
    peer 

    Credit
    Suisse
    is moving 250 jobs to Germany, Madrid, and
    Luxembourg among other EU 27 countries as well as $200 million
    from its market division to Germany. 
  • Germany’s Deutsche
    Bank
    is also considering shifting large volumes of
    assets to Frankfurt as part of its
    Brexit plan.

  • HSBC,
    Europe’s biggest bank, 

    has shifted ownership
    of many of its European subsidiaries from its London-based
    entity to its
    French unit.

  • Australia’s largest bank by
    assets, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, has
    set in motion plans to base around 50 staff in
    Amsterdam
    , and has applied for a banking licence in the
    country.
  • Other Australian lenders
    Macquarie, Westpac, and ANZ are also in talks
    to move operations to Dublin and continental
    Europe. 
  • Europe’s biggest repo trading venue, called
    BrokerTec, is being moved to Amsterdam from London, meaning a
    $240 billion a day repo business is leaving the
    UK. 
  • More than
    100 UK-based asset managers
    and funds have applied to
    the Irish central bank for authorization in Ireland.

The impact of these changes will
see less tax revenue for the government,
fewer jobs
, and a dent in dealmaking, taking a shine off the
City’s lustre.

And that’s just financial
services.

Schaeffler, a car parts company,
is closing two UK factories because of
Brexit,
 leading to 

570 fewer
jobs. 

Among others:
T

here’s a “Brexit-busting” ferry that
sidesteps UK trade routes, drug companies are stockpiling
medicine,
and investors in the once-vibrant UK tech scene are
drying up. (A great Twitter thread by a self-described 48%-er in
Cambridge lists a wide array of industry impact. You can read it
here.)

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