Lord Jim wrote:Yes, and dumbo is undermining his own original argument...Big RR wrote:No, I'm certain it has some value, because multinational corporations will spend a lot of time and money in deciding where to incorporate or to form subsidiaries (lloking at factors such as location, securities laws, taxes, etc.), but it is not the only factor is assessing the value. However, it is the deciding factor as to what exchange(s) it can be registered or traded on, which is what I though Jim was commenting on.
Under his original theory, British companies that do business internationally, (especially those that do substantial business with EU countries, which is true of most major UK companies, certainly the ones on the FTSE 100) should be the ones most negatively impacted by Brexit, and would be least likely to bounce back...
(If the theory that Brexit will damage the British trade position were correct, which I of course do not accept.)
Now he's arguing that because they do business internationally they are less likely to suffer damage to their value, and that's why they've bounced back...
He must be taking philosophical coherence lessons from Donald Trump...
Back to you rube:
What a lying asshole moron you are. I said that international companies do most of their business outside the UK so that Brexit would not impact them as negatively therefore their return to previous levels of valuation was not surprising nor is it proof that markets think Brexit is a good thing. BP and GSK were given as examples. Brexit will not hurt those companies, who can move offices and manufacturing anywhere they like, it will hurt the UK economy overall. But international companies will certainly take into account that investment in the UK is less desireable.
You are like a small child.
yrs,
rubato






