Analysis

Brexit – 2 years & 11 months later

GBPUSD, Weekly

No one imagined that one month from the third anniversary of the vote to leave the EU  the UK would still remain in the Union and that the issue of how to leave would remain unresolved.

Talks between the government and Labour (the official opposition party) — specifically aimed at breaking the deadlock — have collapsed, and all options, theoretically, remain on the table. One thing that does look to be clear is that support for the middle ground on Brexit has fallen away substantially, with a “soft” version now looking deeply unpopular.

The final Brexit showdown is boiling down to a choice between remaining in the EU and an exit from the EU without a deal, the latter of which would see the UK adopt backstop WTO trading terms (an eventuality that many economists fear would erode the UK’s terms of trade position substantially). The polarisation will be apparent at this Thursday’s EU parliamentary elections, which in the UK has boiled down to a contest between the newly established Brexit Party,¹  which favours leaving the EU without a deal, and a pro-remain coalition, led by the Liberal Democrats (which dominated at recent local elections) and including the newly former ChangeUK Party and the Scottish National Party.

The resignation of Prime Minister May is now a fait accompli, most likely in June, when her Tory party will stage a leadership contest. Her replacement will inherit a compromised position as head of a weak minority government in a deeply divided parliament. The new leader will almost certainly have strong Brexiteer credentials, such as Boris Johnson (who is already a favourite). There would be a good chance that a new “Brexiteer prime minister” would call for a strong mandate while stealing the Brexit Party’s thunder by calling a general election and essentially making the vote another referendum on EU membership, betting victory on a “hard” Brexit with a clear pledge to leave the EU without a deal if necessary. A strong showing by the Brexit Party in this week’s EU elections would increase the likelihood of this scenario playing out, which in turn would likely spark fresh declines in the Pound.

 

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