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Business/Finance See other Business/Finance Articles Title: Deal or No-Deal, Brexit Dooms the Euro Deal or No-Deal, when it comes to Brexit, the euro is toast. Markets, however, believe the fantasy of its survival. As we approach the end of July the euro clings to support at $1.11, mere pips away from a technical breakdown. That breakdown will trigger a wave of asset liquidation and another round of negative headlines emanating from troubled German banks. With 10 Downing St. now saying No-Deal is acceptable, the hard line negotiating tactics of the European Union have hit a rocky shore. Because it looks like Boris Johnson is ready to give as good as he gets. Ive been saying this for a long time. The EU is not a tough nut to crack. They have no leverage in these Brexit negotiations. What they had was a stacked deck of British officials negotiating with Brussels on Brussels terms. Its not a negotiation if both sides agree on terms. Its a surrender. The only negotiation that went on during Mays administration was with the British people on accepting the horrific treaty written by German Chancellor Angela Merkels staff and rubber-stamped by May. Today Britain looks different, at least on the surface. The market is punishing them for entertaining No-Deal. The pound is falling out of bed today below $1.24 because Johnson looks serious about re-opening negotiations or opting for No-Deal. But heres the thing. The eurozone is facing a recession. Ive talked about Germanys freefalling economy before. Its not getting any better. And it wont if a no-deal Brexit occurs. So the forex markets are offside today. Way offside. Johnson came out and bypassed the Withdrawal Treaty completely saying lets just move to Stage 2 of Brexit, the free-trade agreement. You never would have heard that under Theresa May. Thats why the pound is getting crushed today. At some point, however, that move will get overdone. The EUR/GBP pair is way overbought and was looking toppy before Mondays massacre in the pound. Whats clear, however, is that in the short term, the pound will be allowed to collapse to assist the Remain case. As the media focuses on the pound falling it neglects the pound is now more attractive to U.S. investors. Its making Trumps offer of a free-trade deal more attractive to wobbly Tory MPs. The pound has been over-valued for years thanks to being slaved to the euro-zone. President Trump knows this and this is why he backs Brexit as well as both Johnson and Nigel Farage. Its also why Trump is going after France for its new taxes on U.S. tech firms. The wine tariff is political cover. Trump is attacking the French side of the brewing war for control of the EU. Frances President Emmanuel Macron, while ignoring the rising potential for domestic revolution via the Gilet Jaunes, has positioned himself as the de facto leader of the EU as Angela Merkels political power wanes. And Brexit is the key to this. Macron wants to punish Britain for Brexit. Hed rather a no-deal than any concessions. Merkel will countenance a deal rather than lose the U.K. completely. Mike Shedlock is right, the EU is complacent now about a No-Deal but panic will soon set in. No-Deal Brexit is very much on the table. Would Macron allow a no-deal to hurt rival Germany since Germanys trade deficit with the U.K. is more important to them than France? I think so. Johnson would be happy to sit down with Trump and cut a free-trade deal yesterday. But being in the EU forbids this. And its France that is the biggest obstacle, regardless, just as it was for any EU/US trade deal. As Martin Armstrong points out today: The restrictions on trade imposed by Brussels are impossible to manage because all 28 members have a say in any trade deal. This is why the deal with the USA took so long to start with and it became unworkable. Trump offered a free trade deal and France was the one screaming the loudest. Germany cannot cut a deal with the USA because of France and neither could Britain. A breakdown in the Euro below $1.11 puts it on the path to its low at $1.034. Markets are screaming for the Bank of England to cut rates alongside the Fed on Thursday. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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