No deal - genuine question 15:16 - Apr 2 with 1015 views | Wicksy | If no deal will be such a disaster - and looking more likely -why is it that the FTSE 100 is going up rather than down? | |
| The cars in the churchyard
Were shiny and German
Distinctly at odds with
The theme of the sermon |
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No deal - genuine question on 15:17 - Apr 2 with 994 views | itfcjoe | Exchange rates? | |
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No deal - genuine question on 15:20 - Apr 2 with 984 views | Darth_Koont | At a guess, because the pound is going down. And most of those companies' earnings come from overseas. | |
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No deal - genuine question on 15:21 - Apr 2 with 979 views | StokieBlue | It's gone down, it's nearly 10% down on what it was last May. It's also a based on a bit more than a single issue as the others have pointed out. Let's see where it is 6 months after a no deal Brexit. SB [Post edited 2 Apr 2019 15:23]
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| Avatar - IC410 - Tadpoles Nebula |
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No deal - genuine question on 20:27 - Apr 2 with 829 views | Oxford_Blue |
No deal - genuine question on 15:20 - Apr 2 by Darth_Koont | At a guess, because the pound is going down. And most of those companies' earnings come from overseas. |
Yes about 71%. | | | |
No deal - genuine question on 20:47 - Apr 2 with 800 views | LeoMuff | Well like the rest of us they probably think there is almost no chance of no deal, the vast majority of mps don’t want it and neither does the EU. | |
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No deal - genuine question on 20:52 - Apr 2 with 778 views | gordon | The chances of no deal are relatively slim and haven't changed much over the last 6 months or so, so the risk will have been priced in. FTSE 100 are global companies anyway, and probably not many with supply chains at significant risk. | | | |
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