So, what comes next?
Last week was a good week for
investors. Ben Levisohn of Barron’s explained:
“The
Federal Reserve and European Central Bank both pledged to do what they could to
underpin their respective economies. The United Kingdom gave Boris Johnson’s
Conservative Party a landslide victory, virtually guaranteeing that the Brexit
saga will end, finally.”
‘Get Brexit done’ was the
slogan of Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s conservative party and British voters
confirmed that’s what they want. As a result, Parliament is likely to accept the
Prime Minister’s withdrawal agreement. Under current deadlines, the United
Kingdom will begin to transition out of the European Union (EU) at the end of January,
reported The Economist.
Prime Minister Johnson
promised to complete the transition by December 2020 despite skepticism about
whether trade agreements can be negotiated and ratified in such a short time. The
Economist reported, “…unless Mr. Johnson is ready to ask for an extension,
the risk of Britain leaving the EU with no trade deal in place at the end of
next year will be significant. The result would be high barriers to exports and
severe disruption to trade.”
There was another important
event last week. The United States government announced, “…a phase-one deal
with China had been completed and that negotiations on phase two would begin
immediately. Details were lacking, but it was surely good news,” reported
Levisohn.
The Wall Street Journal reported the deal has been agreed to in principle,
although nothing has been signed, and neither the United States nor the Chinese
government released the text of the agreement or a detailed summary.
The information released indicates
the United States cancelled tariffs scheduled to take effect last Sunday and
reduced current tariffs on $120 million of Chinese goods. In return, China
agreed to increase purchases of agricultural goods over the next two years. The
agreement is scheduled to be signed in January.
Let’s hope they ink the deal!
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