YorkshireMartin":15yt9paz said:
Sterling is being manipulated once again by the big players, so yes, we, the taxpayer, will bare the brunt of this in the short term, as we always do.
It is almost impossible to manipulate forex in any meaningful sense (more than a few basis points), the volume is too great.
Especially when we have major world economic powers literally falling over themselves to offer free trade deals. We are just waiting on someone to take that forward.
We are like sharks, or shark bait, for which major economic powers?
The FTSE tells the real story. The 250 is down, but not by any significant amount in the great scheme of things. It's probably down because of the speculation on sterling causing blips in import/export for smaller companies, who don't have the capital reserves to even out their prices.
It's down a massive amount from foreign investor's perspective.
The FTSE 100, full robust companies with reserves, is doing very well.
Multinationals with little real exposure to the UK economy, whose largely non-GBP earnings are suddenly worth much more in GBP, have gains in their now cheaper GBP-priced shares. That's just guaranteed by the currency move. Watch it reverse if the currency does.
I am European and I'm English. This vote didn't change my desire for an espresso in Italy or a snowboarding holiday in France, or my desire to learn about other cultures and meet with people of different backgrounds. Being part of the EU is a requirement for none of these things. We're as European as we want to be and nothing will ever change that.