Brexit: Colossal Blunder With Only Negative Economic Ramifications

 | Jun 26, 2016 04:07AM ET

The Merriam-Webster online dictionary defines uncertain as “not definitely known.” Before Thursday, the existence of the EU, the second largest trading block on the planet, was a certainty of international economics. That is no longer the case.

On Thursday, the UK voted to leave the EU, which could be the first of several referendums held by EU countries on their respective EU membership. After the UK's results were published, the head of France’s nationalist party tweeted out her approval of the vote, followed by a statement that France should have a similar referendum.

Other commentators argued the Netherlands or Italy may have a similar plebiscite. In response to the UK’s results, world stock markets tanked and bond markets rallied. Perhaps the only good thing in this situation is there was only one trading day after the vote, allowing traders to assess the situation over the weekend and hopefully develop a more rational approach over the weekend. But don’t be surprised if we have at least a few more weeks of extremely volatile trading as portfolio managers reallocate assets to align with the new reality.

The timing couldn’t be worse. Global growth was already slowing, as recently noted by the IMF in their Spring Report titled, “Too Slow for Too Long:”

The global recovery has weakened further amid increasing financial turbulence. Activity softened toward the end of 2015 in advanced economies, and stresses in several large emerging market economies showed no signs of abating. Adding to these headwinds are concerns about the global impact of the unwinding of prior excesses in China’s economy as it transitions to a more balanced growth path after a decade of strong credit and investment growth, along with signs of distress in other large emerging markets, including from falling commodity prices. With heightened risk aversion and increasing concerns about the lack of policy space, the valuation of risky assets as well as oil prices dropped sharply in early 2016. However, market sentiment began to improve in mid-February, and by the end of March market valuations had recovered most of or all the ground lost earlier in the year.

Russia and Brazil are still in a deep recession; China is rebalancing, which is slowing emerging economies, Abebomics is not having the intended affect in Japan, Canada is emerging from the negative impact of oil’s price slide, and the EU is still growing slowly. And now, the world economy faces the prospect of its largest trading block starting to splinter.

h3 Will the Vote Lead to a British Recession?/h3

Before the election, the UK economy was on fairly decent footing, with GDP growth at about 2% and unemployment at 5%:

Get The News You Want
Read market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.
Get The App