Posts Tagged ‘The Great British Sell-Off’
Posted by seumasach on August 12, 2016
When you have massive debts and you’re never anywhere near to getting to0 the end of the month there are three logical options. Firstly, you can enter into a deal with your creditors, in this case, primarily, China. This is the now discarded Osborne option after the lately departed Chancellor of the Exchequer. Secondly, you can “take out” your creditors. This is the al Capone/Hillary Clinton option. Or, finally, you wait for the bailiffs. This is are post-Brexit option. As the pound falls the Chinese and others will simply buy up the UK in the Great British sell-off. In a way, it is good news since they could simply convert the sterling reserves to gold or other assets, leaving the pound to sink even further. By triggering the regionalization of the UK the Scottish independence referendum has helped to prepare for this scenario by dividing the country into bite-sized units forced to sell assets to make ends meet. Regional administrations can also easily be dominated by overseas interests. I have long argued for the first approach whereby we continue to act as a sovereign nation by resolving the debt issue through negotiations at state to state level. That approach has been spurned and the Panarin scenario looms. Of course, it’s not too late to change course.
From semiconductors to soccer, foreign takeovers are good news for Britain post-Brexit
CityAM
12th August, 2016
While alarmist in tone, this narrative is in part borne out by data – stats recently released by Thomson Reuters point to an increase in the value of foreign takeovers in the month after the UK’s vote to leave the EU. Almost 60 transactions totalling $34.5bn were struck by foreign companies for British firms in the month after 23 June, compared with 79 deals worth $4.3bn in the month leading up to the vote.
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Posted in brexit crisis, UK economy | Tagged: foreign takeovers, The Great British Sell-Off, The Panarin scenario | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on April 14, 2015
“The investment is a strategically important beginning for our exploration in the European market,” Li Huaizhen, Minsheng’s CEO, said in Shanghai
Telegraph
15th February, 2015
A Chinese investment firm has announced it is to invest £1bn in a homegrown development project to create a third financial district in east London.
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Posted in UK economy | Tagged: Chinese soft power, End of empire, The Great British Sell-Off | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on December 16, 2014
The partnerships established with China by the British and Scottish governments are already bearing fruit. This is the one mitigating factor in bankrupt Britain meaning the coming crisis will be less apocalyptic than it would be otherwise. Britain has always depended on incoming capital flows. The difference now is that instead of these going into government bonds they are taking the form of FDI(foreign direct investment). This provides us with a chance to run down our debt as the Chinese cash in their sterling-denominated bonds for real assets, and to end our trade deficit as Britain becomes an export base for Chinese companies or manufactures here goods which we have up until now imported from China. I would also expect them to “recapitalise”, takeover, our banks once they have been bailed in. This is the context in which the commitment of all major parties to a balanced budget, guaranteed by financial devolution to the regions or constituent nations, must be understood. There are no buyers for UK government bonds and QE to infinity is impossible. It is also possible now to avoid the complete collapse of the pound and we may instead hope for an orderly devaluation within a new global financial system prior to eventual adoption of the Euro.
China Daily
12th December, 2014
Chinese companies are growing in the UK at an unprecedented rate, adding a significant contribution to the UK economy through growth and employment, according to the Grant Thornton Tou Ying Tracker 2014 in collaboration with China Daily.
According to the Tou Ying 2014 Top 25 tracker which was released on Friday, the 25 fastest growing Chinese companies in the UK this year have generated 38 percent growth overall. Their combined turnover exceeded 25 billion pounds, and together they employ about 4,000.
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Posted in UK economy | Tagged: new global financial architecture, The Great British Sell-Off, UK-China strategic partnership | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on December 16, 2014
Guardian
15th December
Ignore the economists quibbling whether public spending is returning to the era of George Orwell. If you want to see the future of your local public services, it’s already here: in the north London suburb of Barnet. I visited last week – and it’s not pretty.
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Posted in UK economy | Tagged: The Great British Sell-Off | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 22, 2014
This is a tendency that can only intensify as Britain devolves control of finance. This effectively means we’re giving up our credit card since no regional or devolved administration is sovereign and will not be able to issue sovereign bonds as before. Nor will the UK government itself since it no longer controls its tax base. The SNP has already pointed out that Scottish government borrowing will be within a context of a balanced budget rather than the traditional rolling over of debt and coverage of interest charges only. This end of Keynesianism is accompanied, logically, by the demise of the Labour Party and the left.The UK is and has been for years totally dependent on capital inflows. However, the form these take is changing: rather than going into government bonds they are going into direct investment and purchase of assets.
Revealed: How the world gets rich – from privatising British public services
Independent
20th November, 2014
Foreign governments are making hundreds of millions of pounds a year running British public services, according to an Independent investigation highlighting how privatisation is benefiting overseas – rather than UK – taxpayers.
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Posted in UK economy | Tagged: bankrupt Britain, End of empire, The Great British Sell-Off | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on November 8, 2014
“London was the most popular destination for Chinese institutional investors, with a total of $2.3 billion (1.35 billion pounds), as efforts by the city to draw Chinese capital into major infrastructure projects spilt into residential and commercial markets, JLL said.”
…in first-half, London, U.S. most popular – JLL
Reuters
30th July, 2014
(Reuters) – China‘s institutional investment in property overseas rose 17 percent in the first six months of this year, with residential investment surging 84 percent, real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL) said on Wednesday.
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Posted by seumasach on September 23, 2014
Gov.uk
14th August, 2014
The government has today (25 June 2014) cemented Britain’s position as the western hub for Islamic finance by becoming the first country outside the Islamic world to issue sovereign Sukuk, the Islamic equivalent of a bond.
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Posted in UK economy | Tagged: Islamic finance, The Great British Sell-Off | Leave a Comment »
Posted by seumasach on September 14, 2014
Global Construction Review
Rumours have been circulating in the City of London that an Asian company, possibly Chinese, may be interested in buying Balfour Beatty, the UK’s biggest contractor, since talks over a merger with Carillion broke down.
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