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Brexit One Year On: Political Chaos, Pounded Currency, & Pressured Consumers

Brexit One Year On: Political Chaos, Pounded Currency, & Pressured Consumers

It is exactly one year since the UK held the historic referendum vote on EU membership. As Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid notes, whether you think that has passed quickly or not probably depends on if you’re a Sterling FX trader, in which case it’s more than likely been a long year. With today being the anniversary we thought we would see how assets have performed over the past year since the vote...

Schaeuble: "The Britons Were Endlessly Lied To And Deceived" On Brexit

For the embattled British Prime Minister Theresa May, the Brexit negotiation is rapidly turning into one of the circles of hell, with the British PM, desperate for some shred of consensus, suddenly finds herself making concessions left and right, and even as she refuses to be talked into a "soft Brexit" trap, with the tens of billions in obligations it would entail, she finds she may have no choice but to yield on many other topical issues, and that's without even getting into who keeps control over euro clearing, or the appeals to the European Court of Justice.

The Passing Of The Pelosi Era

Authored by Patrick Buchanan via Buchanan.org,

In the first round of the special election for the House seat in Georgia’s Sixth District, 30-year-old Jon Ossoff swept 48 percent. He more than doubled the vote of his closest GOP rival, Karen Handel.

A Peach State pickup for the Democrats and a huge humiliation for President Trump seemed at hand.

But in Tuesday’s final round, Ossoff, after the most costly House race in history, got 48 percent again, and lost. If Democratic donors are grabbing pitchforks, who can blame them?

US PMIs Tumble To 9-Month Lows, Catching Down To Collapse In 'Hard' Data

US PMIs Tumble To 9-Month Lows, Catching Down To Collapse In 'Hard' Data

Following disappointment from China last week, and Europe this morning, US PMIs (both manufacturing and services) dropped and disappointed as it appears the lagged impact of China's slumping credit impulse are finally hitting the world's economies.

With 'hard' data collapsing to 13 month lows, it is not surprising that 'soft' survey data is finally catching down with Manufacturing at 9-month lows.

Who could have seen this tumble in 'soft' data coming?

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