From beer to drugs to
cars: Global business laments EU vote
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[June 24, 2016]
By Ben Hirschler and Martinne Geller
LONDON (Reuters) - Chief executives
from Tokyo to Denver woke up on Friday to currency turmoil, plunging
share prices and tough decisions after Britain's vote to leave the
European Union raised widespread fears over economic growth.
In Britain itself, businesses including aerospace, pharmaceuticals
and manufacturers predicted long term disruption as the pound
plunged to its lowest level since 1985.
British Airways owner IAG warned that it would not meet its annual
profit target and car manufacturers including Ford, which employs
around 14,000 people in the United Kingdom, indicated that it could
ultimately lead to job cuts.
"Ford will take whatever action is needed to ensure that our
European business remains competitive," the company said, adding
that it had not changed its investment plans yet.
World stocks headed for one the biggest slumps on record as
investors predicted the impact of the narrow 52 vs 48 percent vote
for Britain to leave the European Union would damage economic
confidence across the globe.
The president of Japan's Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal, the world's
second-largest steelmaker, said the vote was extremely
disappointing.
"We are greatly concerned for the negative impact this will have,
not only on Britain and the EU but also on the global economy," said
Kosei Shindo.
Those who campaigned for Britain to leave had said a weaker pound
could help UK exports, but it will also reduce the value of foreign
companies' UK earnings and raise questions about access to the EU
market.
"This decision will create tremendous uncertainty, which will slow
economic activity and decision making," said Martin Sorrell, the
boss of the world's biggest advertising group WPP <WPP.L>.
More than 100 billion pounds ($137 billion) was wiped off the market
cap of the UK's biggest bluechips in early trading.
Jaguar Land Rover, Britain's biggest carmaker, has estimated its
annual profit could shrink by 1 billion pounds ($1.4 billion) by
2020 if Britain returns to World Trade Organization rules for trade
with Europe.
Shares in the company's owner, India's Tata Motors, fell 8 percent.
IMMEDIATE STEPS
Some businesses signaled an intention to push for a settlement
between the UK and the EU that would minimize damage to their
business, while others took immediate steps.
"This is a lose-lose result for both Britain and Europe," said
Airbus <AIR.PA> CEO Thomas Enders. "We will review our UK investment
strategy, like everybody else will."
Volkmar Denner, CEO of Bosch, said its investment plans would not
change, for now, but it was preparing for a weaker British currency:
"We have significantly raised our hedging ratios in order to
counteract a possible depreciation of the British pound. We
currently do not have any plans to scale back our capital
expenditure in the United Kingdom."
Prime Minister David Cameron, who campaigned for Britain to remain
in, said he would resign and leaders in Scotland, which voted
strongly to stay in Europe, said they would consider holding a
referendum to leave the United Kingdom.
Makers of Scotch whisky, who export about 90 percent of what they
produce, have stressed the importance of the EU, which accounts for
about a third of those exports and gives clout in negotiations with
fast-growing markets such as India, which has a 150 percent tariff
on imported spirits.
"There are serious issues to resolve in areas of major importance to
our industry and which require urgent attention, notably the nature
of future trade arrangements with both the single market and the
wider world," said David Frost, chief executive of the Scotch Whisky
Association.
Some investors warned of a coming British or even global recession
as sterling collapsed to hit its lowest since 1985, while the FTSE
100 index fell 5 percent.
Housebuilders Taylor Wimpey, Barratt Developments and Persimmon saw
their market values slump by a fifth on fears of a sharp economic
downturn.
Bank shares such as Barclays and Credit Suisse also tumbled, as well
as domestic retailers like Sports Direct and Marks & Spencers.
Meanwhile safer-haven sectors, like gold miners and tobacco
outperformed.
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Kosei Shindo (C), president of Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp,
speaks to reporters next to Toshinori Miki (3rd R), president of
Nisshin Steel Co., Ltd., after a news conference in Tokyo, Japan,
February 1, 2016. REUTERS/Yuya Shino
STERLING HEADACHE
Big swings in sterling will be a headache for some international companies, with
a fall in the currency hitting profits earned in Britain.
International companies with sizeable sterling exposure include Denver-based
Molson Coors <TAP.N>, owner of Carling beer, which is heavily reliant on the UK.
But for multinationals reporting in sterling, there will be a short-term boost
to profits, when expressed in pounds.
Aside from market access, streamlining of regulations within the EU has made
life simpler.
Pharmaceutical companies, for example, enjoy a one-stop shop in the form of the
London-based European Medicines Agency, which approves new drugs for all EU
countries, while the EU's open airspace deals have fostered a surge in air
travel and common policies on agriculture and food safety have allowed for
smoother supply chains.
Companies in those sectors have fretted that Britain outside the bloc would
disrupt the regulatory landscape.
AstraZeneca said it was concerned for the competitiveness of the British life
sciences industry and would work to ensure patient access to medicines, amid
worries that leaving the EU could delay drug approvals.
Access to workers is another important factor for companies. Automotive industry
executives, who are heavily reliant on exports, ranked tapping a skilled
workforce a close second to accessing EU markets in a survey on reasons to
remain in March.
Ahead of the vote, some British-based multinationals such as Diageo, Unilever
and Rolls-Royce had expressed their support for "Remain" directly to employees,
although most stopped short of this.
Rolls-Royce said on Friday the medium and long-term impact would depend on the
relationships struck by Britain with the EU and the rest of the world.
Government figures show 12.6 percent of Britain's economic output is linked to
exports to the EU's 27 other members, for whom only 3.1 percent of output is
linked to exports to Britain. And 80 percent of British businesses trading
overseas do so with the EU.
The Confederation of British Industry has estimated there could be between
550,000 and 950,000 fewer jobs by 2020 in the event of Brexit.
For banks, a huge concern has been the threat that financial institutions based
in London could lose their EU "passports", or the automatic right to sell
services across the bloc under single low-cost system. That has made bank shares
particularly volatile in the run-up to the referendum.
Brexit uncertainty has also helped push British merger and acquisition activity
this year at its lowest as a proportion of global activity since records began
in 1980.
It could also impact large deals already in process, such as Anheuser-Busch
InBev's $100 billion-plus takeover of SABMiller and the $30 billion merger of
London Stock Exchange Group and Deutsche Boerse, though the latter parties vowed
on Friday to press on with their marriage.
(Additional reporting by Kate Holton, Ritsuko Ando, Yuka Obayashi and Laurence
Frost; editing by Keith Weir and Philippa Fletcher)
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