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‘Initial Brexit shock for Ireland has been contained’ – Noonan

The initial shock from the UK’s Brexit vote has been contained for Ireland, Finance Minister Michael Noonan has said.

At the opening of the National Economic Dialogue, Mr Noonan said there was “no sense of panic” here.

“The NTMA are quite happy that they can fully fund the country,” Mr Noonan said.

Taoiseach Enda Kenny said he was “saddened and disappointed” by the outcome of the vote, but that he respected it.

He said there would be no impact on the available fiscal space for Budget 2017.

But he said the outlook for the medium term was more uncertain.

Article Source: http://tinyurl.com/kbwqb42

Irish stock market in freefall as UK bank stocks plunge

Trading in UK bank stocks was briefly halted this morning as stock markets continued to plunge on the back of the Brexit vote.

So-called circuit breakers – automatic mechanisms for suspending trading in a share of there’s extreme volatility – kicked in on the London market on more than one occasion as shares in Barclays and Royal Bank of Scotland collapsed 18pc. Both have regained a little ground from earlier, but are still 16pc lower.
UK Chancellor George Osborne, and Boris Johnson, both sought to calm markets and investors today, but their entreaties have been roundly ignored as investors continue panic selling of stocks that began on Friday, and Sterling tests fresh lows.

The UK’s FTSE-100 index is currently down 2pc.
Shares in Ireland’s ISEQ Overall Index have been pummelled again. The index is currently 7.6pc lower, with many stocks in freefall.

Bank of Ireland has collapsed 20pc. Ryanair has sunk 10.2pc after Easyjet cut its profit forecast because of air traffic control strikes and the likely impact of the Brexit vote.
Shares in insulation maker Kingspan are 6.7pc lower. CRH has sank 7.3pc, while packaging giant Smurfit Kappa is down 6.6pc.

Sterling fell as much as 11pc against the dollar on Friday for its worst day in modern history, while $2.8 trillion was wiped off the value of world stocks – the biggest daily loss ever.
That trumped even the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy during the 2008 financial crisis and the Black Monday stock market crash of 1987, according to Standard & Poor’s Dow Jones Indices.

Mr Osborne tried to ease investors’ concerns in his first public comments since the referendum. He said he was working closely with the Bank of England and officials in other leading economies for the sake of stability as Britain reshapes its relationship with the EU.
“Our economy is about as strong as it could be to confront the challenge our country now faces,” he told reporters at the Treasury. “It is inevitable after Thursday’s vote that Britain’s economy is going to have to adjust to the new situation we find ourselves in.”

Boris Johnson, a leading proponent of a Brexit and likely contender to replace Prime Minister David Cameron who resigned on Friday, praised Mr Osborne for saying “some reassuring things to the markets”.
The former London mayor said outside his home in north London that it was now clear “people’s pensions are safe, the pound is stable, markets are stable. I think that is all very good news”.

But financial markets took a different view, with sterling sliding more than 3pc against the dollar to $1.3221
The yield on British 10-year government bonds fell below 1pc for the first time due to investors betting that the Brexit vote would trigger a Bank of England interest rate cut aimed at steadying the economy.

Article Source: http://tinyurl.com/kbwqb42

Ireland’s corporation tax will remain low – it’s not an issue, says IDA chief

Ireland’s corporation tax will remain low and is a ‘non-issue’ despite fears that the European Union may move to increase the rate, the IDA chief executive Martin Shanahan has said.

The IDA boss’ comments come after a thinly veiled threat from Fine Gael MEP Brian Hayes, who said that if the EU looks to increase the rate, Ireland will leave the union.
“There is no issue in relation to the corporation tax rate, it’s 12.5pc and Government have been extremely clear that it will continue at 12.5pc.

“Taxation is a sovereign issue it is for national Government to make a decision it’s not an EU issue,” the IDA chief said.
Mr Shanahan was slow to speculate on the potential economic impact a Brexit will have on Ireland’s foreign direct investment.

“What we do know in the interim is that Ireland definitively has access to the European market and we’re extremely stable and I think that will play well with investors and it will be very attractive.
“In the short term companies are concentrating on the immediate fallout they’re watching the markets and so on. Over the coming days they will be looking at what impact this will have on global GDP, on European GDP and what impact in turn that will have on demand on the goods and services that they’re producing,” he said.

Read more: EU has our corporation tax in its sights after UK quits
Mr Shanahan was speaking at the launch of Tech/ Life a new €1.9m State-backed initiative that will look to attract 3,000 top tech professionals per year to Ireland.
The marketing initiative, which is also backed by the Irish tech industry, will look to help meet the demand for tech workers here as companies look to up their Irish operations.

The initial markets the initiative will target include central and southern Europe, which were identified on the back of analysis on talent movement and local search activity.
Tech/ Life Ireland delivery group chairman Karl Flannery said both industry and Government have recognised the need for the country to attract more talent here.

“We have engaged extensively together to understand the needs of the industry in the coming years and to develop this initiative. We are delighted to launch it today. I would encourage companies to register with the initiative and keep Ireland’s tech sector thriving through the attraction of the world’s best talent,” he said.

Article Source: http://tinyurl.com/kbwqb42

BREXIT: Vote to result in downgrade for Ireland as world stocks go into freefall

The confirmation of victory for the leave camp in the Brexit referendum is causing major disruption to financial markets and is set to have serious implications the Irish economy.

The result is “unambiguously negative” for the Irish economy, according Phillip O’Sullivan, chief economist Investec Ireland.
One sixth of all Irish exports go to the UK. The firm has already downgraded Ireland’s GDP forecast to 5pc for 2016 and 4.0pc.

Mr O’ Sullivan told the Irish Independent “It is difficult to forecast the longer-term impact on the Irish economy from a Brexit, as this is highly contingent on the trade arrangements struck between the UK and the rump-EU, but for what it’s worth the range of estimates suggest that Irish per-capita GDP could be between 0.8pc and 2.7pc lower by 2030 than would have been the case under a ‘Stay’ outcome”.
The ESRI has predicted that a Leave vote could hit Irish GDP by between 05pc-1.6pc over the next two years.

The sterling dropped to its lowest level in 30 years overnight as the results began to emerge which pointed towards a vote for Brexit.
Meanwhile, a British vote to leave the European Union sent sterling plunging on Friday and hammered equities across the world as turmoil swept through global markets.

Such a body blow to global confidence could well prevent the Federal Reserve from raising interest rates as planned this year, and might even provoke a new round of emergency policy easing from all the major central banks.
Risk assets were scorched as investors fled to the traditional safe-harbors of top-rated government debt, Japanese yen and gold.

Billions were wiped from share values as FTSE futures fell 7pc FFIc1, EMINI S&P 500 futures ESc1 5pc and Japan’s Nikkei .N225 7.6pc. European stock markets were set to open more than 10pc lower STXEc1.
The British pound collapsed no less than 18 U.S. cents, easily the biggest fall in living memory, to hit its lowest since 1985. The euro in turn slid 3.2pc to $1.1012 EUR= as investors feared for its very future.

Nearly complete results showed a 51.8/48.2pc split for leaving, setting the UK on an uncertain path and dealing the largest setback to European efforts to forge greater unity since World War Two.
Sterling sank a staggering 10.1pc at one point and was slumped at $1.3582 GBP=, having carved out a range of $1.3228 to $1.5022. The fall was even larger than during the global financial crisis and the currency was moving two or three cents in the blink of an eye.

“It’s an extraordinary move for financial markets and also for democracy,” said co-head of portfolio investments of London-based currency specialist Millennium Global Richard Benson.
“The market is pricing interest rate cuts from the big central banks and we assume there will be a global liquidity add from them in the next few hours,” he added.

The shockwaves affected all asset classes and regions.
The safe-haven yen sprang higher to stand at 102.15 per dollar JPY=, having been as low as 106.81 at one stage. The dollar decline of 4pc was the largest since 1998.

That prompted warnings from Japanese officials that excessive forex moves were undesirable. Indeed, traders were wary in case global central banks chose to step in to calm the volatility.

One source told Reuters the Bank of England was in touch with other major central banks ahead of the market open there and the Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda it was ready to provide liquidity if needed to ensure market stability.
Other currencies across Asia and in eastern Europe as it woke up suffered badly on worries that alarmed investors could pull funds out of emerging markets. Poland, where many of the eastern Europeans in Britain come from, saw its zloty PLN= slump 7pc.

RECESSION FEARS

Europe’s natural safety play, the 10-year German government bond, surged to send its yields tumbling back into negative territory and a new record low. [EUR/GVD]
MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS slid almost 5pc, while Shanghai stocks .SSEC lost 1.1pc.

Financial markets have been gripped for months by worries about what Brexit, or a British exit from the European Union, would mean for Europe’s stability.

“Obviously, there will be a large spill-over effects across all global economies if the “Leave” vote wins. Not only will the UK go into recession, Europe will follow suit,” was the gloomy prediction of Matt Sherwood, head of investment strategy at fund manager Perpetual in Sydney.
Investors duly stampeded to sovereign bonds, with U.S. 10-year Treasury futures TYc1 jumping over 2 points in an extremely rare move for Asian hours.

Yields on the cash note US10YT=RR fell 24 basis points to 1.49pc, the steepest one-day drop since 2009 and the lowest yield since 2012.

The rally did not extend to UK bonds, however, as ratings agency Standard and Poor’s has warned it would likely downgrade the country’s triple A rating if it left the EU.
Yields on 10-year gilts were indicated up 20 basis points at around 1.57pc GB10YT=TWEB, meaning higher borrowing costs for a UK government already struggling with a large budget deficit. Standard and Poor’s has said it will strip the UK of its triple A credit rating.

Across the Atlantic, investors were pricing in even less chance of another hike in U.S. interest rates given the Federal Reserve had cited a British exit from the EU as one reason to be cautious on tightening.

“It adds weight to the camp that the Fed would be on hold. A July (hike) is definitely off the table,” Mike Baele, managing director with the private client reserve group at U.S. Bank in Portland, Oregon.
Fed funds futures <0#FF:> were even toying with the chance that the next move could be a cut in U.S. rates.

Commodities likewise swung lower as a Brexit would be seen as a major threat to global growth. U.S. crude CLc1 shed $3.00 to $47.11 a barrel in erratic trade while Brent LCOc1 fell as much as 6pc to $47.83 before clawing back to $48.18.

Industrial metal copper CMCU3 sank 3pc but gold XAU= galloped more than 6pc higher thanks to its perceived safe haven status. [GOL/]

Article Source: http://tinyurl.com/kbwqb42

What does ‘Brexit nightmare’ mean for Ireland?

Analysis: In a few hours, everything has changed. This Irish goverment’s term will be dominated by the fallout

So the nightmare has actually happened. With the decision of the UK to leave the European Union, Ireland now faces a series of consequences – and hard choices – in the short, medium and long term.

Firstly, it is clear that Britain and Europe both face a period of economic and political turmoil, and that Ireland will be deeply affected by this. It is hard to see how the ultimate effects will be anything other than overwhelmingly negative.

Of course, Border controls will not go up immediately. Trade won’t stop overnight. But this morning’s reactions in the markets are a harbinger of things to come. Some difficult changes are on the way.

For Enda Kenny’s administration, however long it remains, the rest of its term of office will be dominated by the fallout from this morning’s result. In a few hours, everything has pivoted, everything has changed.

The electoral drubbing that Enda Kenny suffered and the long period of Government formation meant that his second coalition never really experienced anything like a honeymoon period. But there was at least a period of relative calm in recent weeks, which promised to last until the end of the summer. That period ended in the small hours of this morning.
Mr Kenny now faces leading Ireland through a period of difficulty and uncertainty unprecedented in the last 50 years, more complex and unpredictable than the recent financial crisis, more destabilising the Northern Troubles.

Aside from the immediate political and economic effects – which are likely to be considerable and adverse – it will necessitate the remaking of Ireland’s place in the world, as relations between our two biggest trading and political partners are sundered in a manner as yet unknowable. Of all the things that could happen to an Irish government short of the outbreak of war, this is pretty much up there with the worst of them.

The European Union now faces a crisis of its legitimacy, and its member states a crisis of their democracies, as the rise of populist movements of the political extremes is boosted, perhaps towards power. There is also likely to be a period of deep economic recession. The history of Europe tells us that these things are not good bedfellows.

The breakup of the UK now seems closer than ever before, perhaps inevitable whenever the formal break with the EU comes. It is hard to see pro-EU Scotland sticking with anti-EU England. This break will prompt the most profound questions for Northern Ireland since its establishment as a separate political entity from the rest of Ireland.

Central to the Northern Ireland peace settlement was a slow but inexorable process of making the border less important. Now it is about to get more important. That may not immediately threaten the peace process, but it certainly requires a resetting of the tri-partite relationships between Ireland, Britain and the North.

This will be a delicate process, to say the least of it, undertaken at a time when the two governments are dealing with multifaceted other challenges.

Some measure of preparation for today’s outcome has been going on in Dublin for some time. Ever since David Cameron announced that he would hold a referendum back in 2012, Irish officials and latterly ministers have regarded the prospect of a British exit from the EU as the worst thing that could happen the country.

That view is contested by some Independents and the radical left parties but it is shared, to a greater or lesser degree, by Fine Gael, Fianna Fáil, Labour, Sinn Féin and many of the Independents.

A range of negative effects have been identified, and measures proposed to mitigate or counteract them. But senior officials say that it is difficult to plan for a Brexit until it becomes clear what sort of Brexit Britain intends to effect.

Will the UK leave as soon as possible, or have a period of disengagement that lasts for several years, as some British officials advise? Will they seek to retain membership of the single market? If not, what rules will govern trade between Ireland the Britain – including the South and the North of this island? What will be the nature and legal basis of British-Irish relations, from free movement to tax treaties?

These questions have now attained an urgent importance for Ireland. However, it is likely that the present Cameron administration will not be around for much longer to decide them.
The leadership of the British government is soon likely to pass to people who – as a Financial Times editorial yesterday described them – “are not credible future leaders of the UK”.
The tentative progress towards a giveaway budget in October is likely to be one of the first victims of the result. Earlier this week, Minister for Finance Michael Noonan and Minister for Public Expenditure Paschal Donohoe delivered their Summer Economic Statement, in which they outlined their optimistic (though by no means unrealistic) expectation of having probably in excess of a billion euros to give away in the October budget in tax cuts and extra spending. They have only just recently allocated another half a billion euros in spending this year, principally for health.

But the same document also warned that the economic effects of a British exit would probably wipe out the “fiscal space” – the proceeds of economic growth from which any tax cuts or spending increases are paid.

Should the expected post-Brexit UK recession take hold, the real impact in Ireland would be to derive the Irish Government of hundreds of millions of euros – and possibly into the billions – of revenue. Any increase in unemployment would start pushing social welfare bills higher. Prudence would probably demand a cautious budget. In other words, the prospect for giveaways would recede, and possibly quickly.

If the recession was severe, before long we would be back to austerity budgets. It is doubtful that the present government could withstand any sustained period of austerity. This will be high on the agenda of the Irish Government when ministers meet in emergency session this morning.

By the end of the summer, they will have to decide if the Brexit recession is sufficiently deep to cancel budget giveaways, planned public sector pay increases, and capital spending plans.
Before that, the Government will mandate all arms of the state to push out a strong message internationally that Ireland will not follow the UK out of the EU. Embassies, politicians, agencies like the IDA – all of them will be pressed into service to reassure investors, stock markets and foreign governments.

Within the EU, sources say that the Irish Government will insist that the Britain is not marginalised, or “punished”, in the negotiations on the mechanics of exit. When David Cameron was negotiating his new relationship with the EU – ultimately rejected by his voters – Enda Kenny was his closest ally. That is likely to continue at next week’s emergency European summit.
In the medium term, however, Ireland will not just seek to influence negotiations between the EU and the UK – we will have to redefine our own relationship with our nearest neighbour. The social, cultural and civic relationships between the two islands have never been closer.

But the economic and political relationships have now been thrown into doubt. The most visible aspect of this will be the status of the border, but that is only one aspect of it. There’s a billion euros a week in Anglo-Irish trade.

But Ireland will also seek to take advantage of the UK’s exit. There will be – indeed, there has already been – gentle overtures to financial institutions in the City of London that 50 minutes away on an airplane there is an English speaking EU member, with equally strong links to the US, a strong legal system and a business-friendly government where they would be very welcome to bring their highly paid jobs and their tax contributions. That process will intensify in the coming weeks.

In the longer term, the British exit will present the most serious challenge to the EU in its existence. Some analysts believe that Brexit will push the core of the EU closer together, towards a political union to complement economic and monetary union. Some integrationists in France and Germany actually welcomed the prospect. It looks more like wishful thinking than clear-headed analysis.

The most powerful forces are moving in the opposite direction; anti-EU movements in France, in Italy, in Germany, in Holland, in the Nordic countries, in Austria and elsewhere are likely to draw inspiration from the success of the British campaign. This is not just about the EU; it is about immigration, globalisation and the increasing alienation of people from the political class.

The UK has had a complex about Europe for a long time; it is part of who they are. But disaffection with the EU institutions and suspicion of its leadership is evident right across Europe. After today’s result, few Governments could be guaranteed of carrying a strong majority in favour of continued EU membership. If this is not a crisis for the EU, then what is?
It was evident from the campaign that the gulf between many ordinary British people and their political leaders and institutions is immense. During the campaign, polling suggested that almost half of all leave voters expected that the result would be fixed by the remain-dominated establishment.

This suggests that a huge chunk of the British population believes they are being governed without their consent: think about that for a minute.
Similar currents of public opinion exist here; they explain much of the recent general election result – a rejection by many voters of established politics, a reaction against elites, a surge for populist politics. It is present in a far uglier form all over Europe.

This morning’s result suggests that this angry alienation is becoming the defining political spirit of the age. Ironically, Britain is irrevocably part of this European movement. This morning, as the dust settles, the British result seems like the beginning of something rather than the end. There may be trouble ahead.

Article Source: http://tinyurl.com/kbwqb42

BREXIT: Britain votes to leave EU in historic divorce

Britain has voted to leave the European Union, the BBC said based on voter tallies from Thursday’s referendum, an outcome that would set the country on an uncertain path and deal the largest setback to European efforts to forge greater unity since World War Two.

World financial markets dived as counting from 304 of 382 areas showed a 51.5/48.5 split for leaving. Sterling suffered its biggest one-day fall of 9.4 percent against the dollar on market fears the decision will hit investment in the world’s 5th largest economy, raise questions over London’s role as a global financial capital, and usher in months of political limbo.

The euro slumped nearly four percent against the dollar on concerns a ‘Brexit’ vote would do wider economic and political damage to what would become a 27-member union. Investors poured into safe haven assets including gold, and the yen surged.

In an early mark of international concern, Japan’s top currency diplomat Masatsugu Asakawa said he would consult with Finance Minister Taro Aso on how to respond to the market moves, describing the foreign exchange moves as very rough.
Yet there was euphoria among Britain’s eurosceptic forces, claiming a victory they styled as a protest against British political leaders, big business and foreign leaders including Barack Obama who had urged Britain to stay in the bloc.

“Dare to dream that the dawn is breaking on an independent United Kingdom,” said Nigel Farage, leader of the eurosceptic UK Independence Party.
“If the predictions are right, this will be a victory for real people, a victory for ordinary people, a victory for decent people…Let June 23 go down in our history as our independence day.”

He called the EU a “doomed project”.

Asked if Prime Minister David Cameron, who called the referendum in 2013 and campaigned to stay in the bloc, should resign if Britain voted for Brexit, Farage said: “Immediately.”

Quitting the EU could cost Britain access to the EU’s trade barrier-free single market and mean it must seek new trade accords with countries around the world. President Barack Obama says it would be at the “back of a queue” for a U.S. pact.
The EU for its part will emerge economically and politically weakened, facing the departure not only of its most free-market proponent but also a member country that wields a U.N. Security Council veto and runs a powerful army. In one go, the bloc will lose around a sixth of its total economic output.

Cameron is expected to formally report the result to his European counterparts within days and prepare negotiations for the first exit by a member state from the EU — an exit he has said would be irreversible.
The British leader called the referendum in 2013 in a bid to head off pressure from local eurosceptics, including within his own party. Initially billed as an easy ride, the vote has now put his political future on the line. Party ally Boris Johnson, the former London mayor who became the most recognizable face of the “leave” camp, is now widely tipped to seek his job.

Opinion polls had see-sawed throughout an acrimonious four-month campaign, but the Remain camp edged ahead last week after a pro-EU member of parliament, Jo Cox, was shot and stabbed to death. The attack shocked Britons and raised questions about whether the tone of the debate was fuelling intolerance and hatred.
In the end though, the pro-EU camp was powerless to stop a tide of anti-establishment feeling and disenchantment with a Europe that many Britons see as remote, bureaucratic and mired in permanent crises.

TORN APART
Britain, which joined the then European Economic Community (EEC) in 1973, has always been an ambivalent member. A firm supporter of free trade, tearing down internal economic barriers and expanding the EU to take in ex-communist eastern states, it opted out of joining the euro single currency or the Schengen border-free zone.

Cameron’s ruling Conservatives in particular have risked being torn apart by a slow by steady rise in euroscepticism ever since differences over Europe triggered the ousting of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1990.

World leaders including Obama, Chinese President Xi Jinping, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, NATO and Commonwealth governments had all urged a “Remain” vote, saying Britain would be stronger and more influential in the EU than outside.
Yet the four-month campaign has been among the divisive ever waged in Britain, with accusations of lying and scare-mongering on both sides and rows on immigration which critics said at times unleashed overt racism.

It also revealed deeper splits in British society, with the pro-Brexit side drawing support from millions of voters who felt left behind by globalization and believed they saw no benefits from Britain’s ethnic diversity and free-market economy.

The murder last week of lawmaker Jo Cox, a former aid worker and ardent Remain campaigner, by a man shouting “Britain first” shocked the country and gave the pro-EU camp a temporary boost.
But in the end, concerns over uncontrolled immigration, loss of sovereignty, remote rule from Brussels and a protest vote from working class northern voters appear to have trumped almost unanimous warnings of the economic perils of going it alone.

“People are concerned about how they have been treated with austerity and how their wages have been frozen for about seven years,” said John McDonnell, finance spokesman for the opposition Labour Party, which had favoured a Remain vote.

“A lots of people’s grievances have come out and we have got to start listening to them.”
Surveys on public attitudes across the EU have for years shown growing disenchantment with European integration, a project that began in the 1950s as a common market for steel and coal but which over the years offered members the chance to join up to a single currency and do away with old national borders.

Yet while it has become a feature of everyday life seen in everything from EU-sponsored student exchanges to rules on mobile telephone roaming charges, the EU lost public support over its handling of the 2009 sovereign debt crisis that inflicted painful austerity on much of the south of the continent and left many citizens in northern countries resentful at having to fund bailouts.

Right-wing British eurosceptics seized on the euro zone crisis to argue that Britain was “shackled to a corpse”.
Aside from Denmark-ruled Greenland, which left the EEC in 1985 after a row over fishing rights, Britain is the first country to leave the EU, and even EU officials say it takes the continent into uncharted territory.

EU affairs ministers and ambassadors from member states gather in Luxembourg by 10 a.m. (0800 GMT) for routine talks that will provide the first chance for many to react. A regular EU summit has been pushed back to next Tuesday and Wednesday, when Cameron may trigger Article 50 of the EU’s treaty, the legal basis for a country to leave, setting in motion two years of divorce negotiations.

Even less clear at this stage is what sort of relationship Britain will seek to negotiate with the EU once it has left.
To retain access to the single market, vital for its giant financial services sector, London would have to adopt all EU regulation without having a say in its shaping, and pay a substantial contribution to Brussels coffers for market access, as Norway and Switzerland do. EU officials have said UK-based banks and financial companies would lose automatic “passport” access to sell services across Europe if Britain ceased to apply the EU principles of free movement of goods, capital, services and people.

Aside from trade, huge questions now face the millions of British expatriates who live freely elsewhere in the bloc and enjoy equal access to health and other benefits, as well as some 2 million EU citizens who live and work in Britain.

Core founding members of the EU such as France and Germany will be wary of making life too easy for Britain for fear of encouraging eurosceptics across the continent to call for referendums in their countries.
French Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron said last weekend that “when you’re out, you’re out”, insisting Britain could expect no preferential treatment. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has issued similar warnings.

Both countries, whose painful post-war reconciliation formed the basis for the future union of Europe, must now deal with buoyant anti-EU parties at home, with the Alternative fuer Deutschland in Germany and the Front National in France.

Article Source: http://tinyurl.com/kbwqb42

Irish share prices hammered as vote sends Iseq into 12pc slump

Many of Ireland’s largest companies have seen their share price rocked this morning following the UK’s decision to leave the European Union.

The Iseq has suffered a 12.73pc fall so far this morning with shares in Permanent TSB, Bank of Ireland, Paddy Power Betfair, and CRH amongst the worst hit.

Shares in PTSB are down 26pc, with Paddy Power Betfair falling by 15.57pc.

Smurfit Kappa is down 10.35pc while Total Produce is down 14.97pc so far this morning.
Transport firms were hit this morning by the fallout of the vote also. Ryanair fell by 13pc and Irish Continental Group, the company that owns Irish Ferries is down 9.17pc.

Meanwhile shares in Grafton Group are down 18.4pc in opening trading.
Bank of Ireland shares are down 23pc so far this morning while Patrick Coveney’s Greencore has dipped 12.62pc.

Willie Walsh’s IAG group, the airline firm that owns Aer Lingus, which is listed in the UK, is down 13pc.
The fall in share prices across Irish firms represents the immediate impact of the Brexit vote, however the specifics of its long term effects remain unknown. The outcome may put a question mark over the flotation of AIB in both the short and medium term.

The Irish market is not alone in suffering the consequences of the UK’s historical referendum. This morning’s result has sent sterling plunging this morning holding an adverse effect on most of the global markets.
British markets plunged on Friday, with sterling hitting a 31-year low in its biggest fall on record and UK stock futures pointing to a steep fall at the market open.

Bonds also sold off sharply, pushing UK government borrowing costs sharply higher, as traders and investors grappled with the market implications of ‘Brexit’.
The pound had hit a 2016 high above $1.50 after an earlier opinion poll showed an outcome in favor of ‘Remain’, but fell nearly 17 cents from that peak as area counts came in and TV stations said the Brexit camp had won the landmark referendum.

The British currency’s fall of almost 10 percent was also historic, marking a decline greater than anything seen since free-floating system of exchange rates was introduced in the early 1970s.
It was even bigger than on ‘Black Wednesday’ in 1992, when billionaire financier George Soros was instrumental in pushing the pound out of the Exchange Rate Mechanism.

Article Source: http://tinyurl.com/kbwqb42

UK retailer John Lewis to enter Irish market with Arnotts deal

UK retailer John Lewis is to enter the Irish market after securing an exclusive deal with Arnotts that will see the company occupy a section of the Henry Street store.

The UK department store will take up around 2,000 sq ft of retail space in the Arnotts store, according to the Irish Times.
As part of the deal Arnotts will sell 700 products from John Lewis’ own-brand home and lifestyle range.

It marks the first major deal for Arnotts since being acquired by the Selfridges group last November.
The deal is the culmination of John Lewis’ interest in Ireland having been previously touted to take over Clerys.

Article Source: http://tinyurl.com/kbwqb42

Looking for a mortgage? EBS third lender to offer cash back

A third lender is to offer a cash incentive to home buyers in a bid to get them to take a mortgage out with it.

EBS, which is part of AIB, is offering 2pc of the value of the mortgage drawn down when buyers take out a home loan with it.
Bank of Ireland was the first to offer cash back to mortgage holders, in a move that proved so popular it was replicated by Permanent TSB, and now EBS.

The offer means that a couple drawing down a €300,000 mortgage will get €6,000 handed to them in cash when the mortgage is issued. It works out at €2,000 for every €100,000 of mortgage debt.
Borrowers who sign up for the cash-back offers generally have to commit to stay with the lender for at least five years, but EBS has no lock-in period.

A spokeswoman said: “Customers do not have to stay with EBS in order to avoid a clawback on the 2pc. The bank is confident customers will stay to avail of its competitive rates.”
The cash-back deal applies to first-time buyers and those moving, whether they are taking out a fixed or variable rate.

EBS chief executive Des Fitzgerald said: “We are now offering our customers 2pc of their mortgage back in cash, a substantial sum that would typically cover home purchase costs such as stamp duty, legal fees and valuation.”
EBS has interest rates of as low as 3.3pc for new borrowers who are getting a mortgage for less than 50pc of the value of the property. A rate of 3.7pc applies for those borrowing more than 80pc of the value of the property. It’s variable rate for existing borrowers is 3.7pc.

However, there was no EBS interest rate reduction announced this time.
AIB’s variable rate is due to fall to by 0.25pc to 3.4pc on July 1. AIB is also giving a €2,000 contribution towards professional fees for customers.

Article Source: http://tinyurl.com/kbwqb42

Apple to face Irish led probe in privacy sweep

The Irish Data Protection Commissioner, Helen Dixon, is to “scope” a privacy audit of Apple in relation to a “very specific risk” that Apple device users are said to face.

“We’ve identified a very specific risk,” said Ms Dixon. “This is something substantive that we want to look into. It’s a type of area for audit that will affect lots of data subjects and probably any data subject that uses Apple devices in particular.”
Ms Dixon declined to give more details about the upcoming probe, as her office has not yet commenced detailed discussions with Apple on the subject. She said that it is due to begin in the autumn.

However, Independent.ie understands that the issue relates to Apple’s ‘AppleCare’ IT support system. The Irish regulator is set to probe whether data accessed by Apple during the enquiry process meets with European standards.
Ms Dixon said that the issue arose after receiving notice from another European data protection regulator.

“The Office has recently received a number of related individual complaints from the Bavarian data protection authority that concern an aspect of personal data processing by Apple,” she said.
“Due to the nature of the issues which could affect many users, it is intended this Office will scope a number of questions arising from the complaints for audit and inspection with Apple. It may be the case that when the scoping and any arising audit and inspection are completed, no substantive issues or contraventions will be identified or, equally, it may be the case that the DPC will seek to make recommendations for compliance with the Data Protection Acts.

“It is not possible at this point, as the scoping has not yet occurred, to draw any conclusions as to what the outcome in this matter will be.”
However, she said that the Irish Data Protection Authority is currently investigating another software giant, Adobe, in relation to its ‘Digital Editions’ ebook product.

In a wide-ranging interview with the Irish Independent, Ms Dixon also said her office has battled “misapprehensions” abroad that Irish data protection implementation was more lax than in other European countries. She again rebutted claims that the Irish state was “deliberately not investing in data protection and was more interested in multinationals and jobs”.
“We have countered the misapprehension that somehow we took data privacy less seriously or that we weren’t as professional as an office,” she said.

Ms Dixon also said that she hopes her office will have 120 personnel by 2018, a four-fold increase on its staffing levels two years ago.
She said that the unresolved status of data transfers between Europe and the US, brought about by the European Court Of Justice’s dismissal of the ‘Safe Harbour’ agreement and by ongoing doubt over its ‘Privacy Shield’ successor, have left companies facing “uncertainty”.

“It is a mess,” said Ms Dixon. “There’s an effort to try and square the circle of whether data flows can go between the EU and the US and we’re not yet sure if that circle can be squared.”
She said that European and American administrations would need to reach a “political” solution to the problem based on “trade-offs”.

“Europeans have a fundamental right to have their data privacy protected.
“They also have rights to freedom of expression and consequent rights to access digital services. We won’t be thanked if, ultimately, the result is a degradation of services in Europe or the pulling out of certain services in Europe.”

Ms Dixon said that the Irish Data Protection Authority differed from other European data regulators, which engage with multinationals “from behind a wall”.

“That approach serves no-one’s interests, least of all the data subjects of Europe,” she said. “In order to protect privacy rights in these novel and innovative scenarios, you have to understand what these companies are doing… We believe that our approach delivers.”

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