LONDON MARKETS: Pound Plunges As Boris Johnson's Bid To Suspend Parliament Raises No-deal Brexit Fears
August 28 2019 - 8:01AM
Dow Jones News
By Callum Keown
The pound plummeted on Wednesday as British Prime Minister Boris
Johnson set out plans to suspend Parliament, slashing MPs' hopes of
blocking a no-deal Brexit.
The move would see Parliament suspended for five weeks before
returning on Oct. 14--less than three weeks before Britain's
scheduled departure from the EU on Oct. 31.
Sterling plunged 0.7% to $1.2201 and was the world's
worst-performing currency on Wednesday morning.
What's moving the markets?
Johnson's controversial move to prorogue Parliament, viewed as a
bid to force through a no-deal Brexit, sent the pound plunging
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/pound-drops-sharply-on-reports-uk-parliament-to-be-prorogued-2019-08-28).
The government has asked the Queen to suspend Parliament from
the week of Sept. 10
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/johnson-to-suspend-parliament-before-brexit-date-2019-08-28).
Johnson's political opponents blasted the timetable, which would
limit MPs' ability to block a no-deal Brexit.
Markets fear a no-deal Brexit, which the Bank of England's
worst-case scenario predicted would see sterling crash to parity
with the U.S. dollar for the first time in its history.
Citi economist Christian Schulz said: "The timing is convenient,
it would shorten the time for Parliament to force the government
away from a no-deal Brexit by two weeks.
"The no-deal opposition, especially the up to 40 Tory rebel MPs,
is under pressure to demonstrate how far it is prepared to go to
stop no-deal Brexit."
He added that it was now more likely that a no-confidence vote
in the government would be called next week.
"Many bumps and twists remain, but today's announcement makes
our base case, another Brexit delay and a general election, more
likely."
The internationally exposed FTSE 100 outperformed the other
major European indexes, trading flat as the pound slid
The domestically focused FTSE 250 fell 0.9%.
Which stocks are active?
Thomas Cook (TCG.LN) shares plunged 16.6% after the travel
operator agreed a rescue deal with Chinese investor Fosun. Thomas
Cook said shareholders' interests would be "significantly diluted"
by the deal and warned it could even cancel its listing.
BP (BP.LN) rose 1.9% after agreeing to sell its Alaska assets
for $5.6 billion, which will reduce its debt pile. Shares were also
helped by rising crude prices due to a larger-than-expected decline
in U.S. oil stockpiles.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
August 28, 2019 07:46 ET (11:46 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2019 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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