Relief for supply chains as congestion fears from people-processing at Dover ease
Changes in processing France-bound holidaymakers departing from Dover could offer a small win to British ...
AMZN: APPEAL UPDATEDSV: PRESSURE BUILDS AAPL: OPENAI FUNDING INTERESTCHRW: ANOTHER INSIDER CASHES INHLAG: GRI DISCLOSUREMAERSK: HOVERING AROUND FOUR-MONTH LOWSTSLA: CHINA COMPETITIONDHL: BOLT-ON DEAL TALKAMZN: NEW ZEALAND PROJECTDHL: SURCHARGE RISKKNIN: LEGAL RISKF: 'DEI' HURDLESPLD: RATING UPDATEXOM: DISPOSALS
AMZN: APPEAL UPDATEDSV: PRESSURE BUILDS AAPL: OPENAI FUNDING INTERESTCHRW: ANOTHER INSIDER CASHES INHLAG: GRI DISCLOSUREMAERSK: HOVERING AROUND FOUR-MONTH LOWSTSLA: CHINA COMPETITIONDHL: BOLT-ON DEAL TALKAMZN: NEW ZEALAND PROJECTDHL: SURCHARGE RISKKNIN: LEGAL RISKF: 'DEI' HURDLESPLD: RATING UPDATEXOM: DISPOSALS
The big Brexit question in aviation is whether the UK will continue to be in the European Common Aviation Area – a scenario that currently (although things are changing by the minute) seems pretty likely. ATW has done a good piece on the possible exit of the UK from the EU-US open skies agreement, while for a full breakdown on possible consequences for aviation, IATA was quick to provide a thorough analysis. Essentially, while it’s bad for outbound transport, the worthless pound is good for inbound. But in the longterm, to 2030, the OECD has estimated that UK trade volumes could fall 10-20%, although this could all, of course, be down to negotiation. The basic trade-off is policy power versus access to free markets, as this handy chart shows.
Comment on this article