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10 January 2018

Bloomberg: EU risks global bank crisis if it blocks Brexit deal, UK warns


The European Union risks opening the door to another global financial crisis if it refuses to give London’s bankers a good trade deal, Chancellor Philip Hammond and Brexit Secretary David Davis wrote in a German newspaper, as the finance industry emerged as a key battleground for Brexit talks.

In a joint article for a German newspaper, Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond and Brexit Secretary David Davis said they want close cooperation between EU and U.K. regulators after the country leaves, as part of an expansive trade deal covering both goods and financial services.

This will enable both sides to continue their work ensuring “such a catastrophe” as the 2008 crash “doesn’t happen again,” the ministers wrote in a guest column for the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. “We must re-double our collective effort to ensure that we do not put that hard-earned financial stability at risk, by getting a deal that supports collaboration within the European banking sector, rather than forcing it to fragment.”

The intervention from the British government is carefully timed to make the case for a more ambitious trade agreement than the EU currently seems willing to offer, before the remaining 27 member states make up their minds. Davis and Hammond are both in Germany on Wednesday meeting business groups and making Britain’s case for a wide-ranging Brexit deal. [...]

In their FAZ article, Davis and Hammond suggested they will seek to maintain a high degree of regulatory alignment with the EU in order to allow banks to operate as freely as possible across the bloc.

“For such a close trade partnership in goods and services to succeed, we will need to maintain our common principles – including our shared belief in high standards – and continue the intelligent cooperation of our regulators,” the pair said. “The trust we place in each others regulators, in a whole range of areas, has been built up over many years of cooperation and there’s no good reason why it should disappear after the UK leaves the EU.”

Full article on Bloomberg



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