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Another rejection...
“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.” -
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I'm alright JackComment
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Well, we have a stable govern...Originally posted by Eirikur View PostDon't worry, we have a strong and stable government
well at least a governme... er...
Oh dear.Down with racism. Long live miscegenation!Comment
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Always worth remembering that lots of EU financial firms trade in the UK under passporting rules, as well as companies based in the UK trading in the rest of of the EU. And indeed more EU firms trade in the UK, than UK firms trading in the EU.
So is the EU really trying to take away UK customers from EU firms?Taking a break from contractingComment
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TheUKholdsallthecards2.0Originally posted by chopper View PostAlways worth remembering that lots of EU financial firms trade in the UK under passporting rules, as well as companies based in the UK trading in the rest of of the EU. And indeed more EU firms trade in the UK, than UK firms trading in the EU.
So is the EU really trying to take away UK customers from EU firms?Comment
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No. The EU is trying to entice those EU firms to set up their base within the EU instead of (or complementary to) their U.K. counterparts.Originally posted by chopper View PostAlways worth remembering that lots of EU financial firms trade in the UK under passporting rules, as well as companies based in the UK trading in the rest of of the EU. And indeed more EU firms trade in the UK, than UK firms trading in the EU.
So is the EU really trying to take away UK customers from EU firms?
UK customers will still be customers of the firm, just of the UK subsidiary rather than the main office, and shouldn’t see any practical difference (apart from any change to customer rules themselves, now that the U.K. is a third country).Comment
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