Branson says Virgin Group
loses third of its value after Brexit
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[June 28, 2016]
LONDON (Reuters) - Richard Branson,
founder and chairman of Virgin Group, said on Tuesday the company had
lost about a third of its value since last week's vote by Britons to
leave the European Union, adding he believed the country was heading
towards a disaster.
Branson said Britain would fall into recession and that there should be
a second vote now that people could see the implications of what exiting
the bloc would have on the economy.
"This country is going to go into recession. Two of the worst days ever
- banks have been pounded means they are not going to lend money, we're
going to go into recession," he told the "Good Morning Britain" TV
program.
"We are heading towards a disaster. I don't believe the public realized
what a mess their vote would cost."
The billionaire entrepreneur said his airline-through-finance group had
canceled a "very big" deal since the vote which would have involved some
3,000 jobs.
"We're not any worse than anybody else but I suspect we've lost a third
of our value," he said.
Branson called for a second EU membership referendum, saying he believed
the public had not been given the true facts by those backing Brexit.
"When Brexiters told the public that people were exaggerating there
would be a financial meltdown I think it's been proven they were not
exaggerating," he said.
"I think one of the reasons why there should be a second referendum,
particularly once the terms are known about what our entry into Europe is going
to cost us, the public will then have all the facts."
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Richard Branson unveils the new SpaceShipTwo, in Mojave, California,
United States, February 19, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
In separate comments to the Guardian newspaper, he said he had met a group of
Chinese businessmen who had invested heavily in England, but who would now stop
future investment plans and withdraw those they had already made.
"Business people do not want politicians to completely and utterly wreck the
hard work they’ve done for years and years and that is effectively what
happened," he told the paper.
"Thousands and thousands of jobs will be lost as a result of this. Thousands of
jobs that would have been created will be lost and the knock-on effect will be
so dire."
(Reporting by Michael Holden; editing by Kate Holton)
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