"It's been an orderly impact so far," Lew said in an interview
on CNBC.
Lew said he expects a transition period as parties work through
the ramifications of the June 23 referendum, in which Britons
voted by a 52 percent to 48 percent margin to withdraw from the
EU.
"Responsible parties will work through this," Lew said, adding
he expected to see a fairly long period of change and that
governments must focus on promoting growth.
The referendum outcome roiled global markets, triggering a $2.08
trillion sell off in global stock markets on Friday, the largest
one-day loss in stock market value ever. U.S. stocks fell by
more than 3 percent, and investors piled into safe assets such
as U.S. Treasury securities, driving already meager bond yields
lower.
The selling was continuing on Monday morning, with U.S. equity
index futures pointing to a decline of about 1 percent for Wall
Street.
Still, Lew said he sees the U.S. economy weathering the
situation, even as the referendum result presents "an additional
headwind."
"The U.S. economy is doing pretty well," Lew said.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Writing by Susan Heavey and Dan
Burns; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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