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03 March 2017

Bloomberg: Paris hopes for Brexit bank jobs run up against Frexit fears


There’s one big thing standing in the way of France luring banking jobs from London after Brexit: the prospect of Frexit.

With Marine Le Pen among the leading presidential candidates, her platform of taking France out of the euro and the European Union is repelling finance executives. If she loses, a more business-friendly leader such as Francois Fillon or Emmanuel Macron could implement reforms that would make Paris more competitive. [...]

Le Pen, the candidate of the far right National Front, wants to leave the euro, revoke central bank independence and print a new currency to finance welfare and industrial projects. Polls show the 48-year-old leading in the first round of balloting in April, but losing the May runoff against either Macron or Fillon.

Still, the campaign of the conservative Fillon, a former prime minister, has been rocked by a worsening scandal over the employment of his wife and children as parliamentary aides. And while the 39-year-old Macron, running as an independent, has climbed in opinion polls, he’s never held elective office and the durability of his support is untested. 

Twists and Turns

Twists in the campaign have been rippling through the bond market as investors, stunned last year by Britain’s decision to leave the European Union and the election of U.S. President Donald Trump, remain attuned to any possibility of a Le Pen upset. The gap in yield between French 10-year bonds and their German equivalent grew to the widest since 2012 last month.

As Paris vies with Frankfurt, Dublin and other cities for the potential spoils of Britain’s exit, the presidential race is shaping up as a make-or-break event. Pledges by Fillon, 62, to lower taxes, smooth hiring and firing rules and scrap the 35-hour work-week got discreet praise early on from French corporate leaders. Executives are increasingly looking favorably on Macron’s less aggressive reform plans, which he outlined in a presentation Thursday.

Paris currently has about 150,000 finance industry employees, including back-office staff, and could lure 20,000 workers or more from Britain after Brexit, estimated Paris Europlace, the city’s financial lobby group. Four globally systemic banks as well as insurance giant Axa SA have their headquarters in the Paris region. The city is also one of Europe’s biggest asset-management and bond-trading centers. [...]

Full article on Bloomberg



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