New York overtakes London as top financial center;
Brexit blamed
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[September 12, 2018]
By Andrew MacAskill
LONDON (Reuters) - New York has overtaken
London as the world's most attractive financial center, a survey said on
Wednesday, as Britain's decision to leave the European Union prompts
banks to shift jobs out of the city to preserve access to Europe's
single market.
Brexit poses the biggest challenge to the City of London’s finance
industry since the 2007-2009 financial crisis, since it might mean banks
and insurers lose access to the EU, the world’s biggest trading bloc.
New York took first place, followed by London, Hong Kong and Singapore
in the Z/Yen global financial centers index, which ranks 100 financial
centers on factors such as infrastructure and access to quality staff.
London's ranking fell by eight points from six months ago, the biggest
decline among the top contenders. The survey's authors said the drop
reflected the uncertainty around Brexit.
"We are getting closer and closer to exit day and we still don't know
whether London will be able to trade with all the other European
financial centers," Mark Yeandle, the co-creator of the index, told
Reuters.
"The fear of losing business to other centers is driving the slight
decline and people are concerned about London's competitiveness."
Since Britain voted more than two years ago to leave the EU, some of the
world’s most powerful finance companies in London have begun moving
staff to the EU to preserve the existing cross-border flow of trading
after 2019.
Around 5,000 roles are expected to be shifted or created in the EU from
London by March next year, the date of Britain's EU exit, a study by
Reuters published in March found.
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Workers walk to work during the morning rush hour in the financial
district of Canary Wharf in London, Britain, January 26, 2017.
REUTERS/Eddie Keogh/File Photo
The head of the City of London financial district predicted in July that 3,500
to 12,000 financial jobs would go because of Brexit.
The past year has seen a pick-up in the number of banks saying they plan to set
up new EU subsidiaries after Brexit. Most major U.S., British and Japanese banks
said they would build up operations in Frankfurt, Paris or Dublin.
Other European centers moved in the global rankings. Zurich rose to ninth place
from 16th place six months ago. Frankfurt rose to 10th from 20th place and
Amsterdam climbed to 35th place from 50th place.
"London and New York have long vied for the top spot of this index and the
uncertainty around the future shape of Brexit is likely to be factor in their
latest switch in positions," said Miles Celic, chief executive of the lobbying
group TheCityUK. "In a competitive world we cannot afford complacency."
(Reporting By Andrew MacAskill; editing by Guy Faulconbridge, Larry King)
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