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MEP Brian Hayes says Dublin would be ‘ideal’ location for banking watchdog / The London based financial watchdog European Banking Authority (EBA), could relocate to Dublin once the UK moves ahead with plans to exit the European Union.
Goldman Sachs is to start moving hundreds of staff out of London before a Brexit deal is struck, the bank’s European boss has confirmed.
Paris today launched a major campaign to lure London’s financial firms across the Channel after Brexit. / More than 80 key business bosses, who were gathered at the Shard in central London, were told that the French capital could offer “stability” as the only “global city” that will be left in the EU when Britain quits.
Major banks are preparing to shift parts of their operations away from London as Theresa May is set to trigger Article 50.
Bank says 2,000 front office people could be moved, with another 2,000 posts to be reviewed depending on new regulations
Thomson Reuters is planning to move its foreign exchange trading business from London to Dublin due to Brexit. The company has applied to the Irish central bank for a licence, the Financial Times reported.
Parisian business district La Défense is to build seven new skyscrapers over the next five years to accommodate an expected influx of demand from banks fleeing post-Brexit Britain.
La Défense district in Paris has been announced to house seven new skyscrapers, designed by a number of renowned architecture firms like Foster + Partners, Ateliers Jean Nouvel, and Christian de Portzamparc.
Macron said the towers would cater to bankers, academics and researchers who might be forced to decamp from London to the Paris business district following the UK's exit from the European Union.
Mark Carney sets 14 July deadline to see plans, saying firms must prepare for ‘all eventualities’ as he calls on politicians not to cut City adrift from Europe
Today, the Prime Minister triggered Article 50. As she did so, with no warning she launched a veiled threat to Europe over security cooperation. Two hours later the Home Secretary made it worse - threatening to withhold security information from Europe if we don't get the deal we need.
Prime minister’s remarks in article 50 letter prompt reply that other member states will not accept security collaboration as bargaining chip.
Ex-Nato chief accuses ministers of ‘clumsy’ approach after letter triggering article 50 appeared to threaten defence cooperation
The United Kingdom’s vote to leave the European Union—“Brexit”—has inspired a global exodus of sorts, sparking interest in second passports in nations like Ireland and economic citizenship and residency programs in Cyprus and Malta.
The Brexit vote has led to a "brain drain" of teaching staff and a drop in student numbers at the UK's architecture and design institutes, according to a body representing creative higher education establishments, which warns that universities will be forced to shut down.
If your dreams involve a workplace in which your skills are in demand, and you still want to enjoy the benefits of being a part of the EU, we’re just a cheap flight away
The country’s decision to leave the European Union has left many in the local tech community questioning the place of the U.K. — and their own — in the global digital economy.
May and her Brexit-backing band have, up until now, always been able to count on the majority being in their corner.
The YouGov/Times survey found 43 per cent of voters believe Britain was right to vote to leave the EU. However, 45 per cent of the 1,590 surveyed said they thought it was the wrong decision.
More people think Brexit is wrong than right for the first time since the referendum, according to a Times poll which shows the Tory lead ahead of the election has shrunk in the past week.
Research suggests voters' views on EU membership have changed since the June referendum, with Remain now having majority support by the narrowest of margins
Theresa May’s claim that “no deal is better than a bad deal” has been criticised as unsubstantiated by a parliamentary committee, but its pro-Brexit MPs have refused to back the findings.
In truth, the Buzzfeed leak doesn't tell us anything we didn't already know. It's a bit less severe than the Treasury analysis from before the referendum, but it's playing in the same sandpit. It's broadly in line, if a little more moderate, than most of the analysis conducted before and after the referendum.