Investors are eager for the Brexit saga to end, but they aren’t blind to the potential drawbacks of U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s new deal with the EU, explains @Spencerjakab. #WSJWhatsNow https://on.wsj.com/33JG21T https://t.co/5sNhnwtROJ
What could a no-deal Brexit look like for businesses, the economy and consumers in the U.K.? @SaabiraC breaks down the potential consequences of the U.K. crashing out of the EU without a deal. #WSJWhatsNow https://t.co/yixA2Q2Spq
A no-deal Brexit would spark potential shortages of fuel and medicines, long traffic jams at ports and rising food prices, the U.K. government said in a report outlining the worst-case scenarios https://on.wsj.com/34CYNVY
Clayton, Dubilier & Rice’s $1 billion deal represents a potential endorsement in the future of the U.K. economy ahead of Brexit https://on.wsj.com/2FdD9gO
The U.K. economy has been showing signs of steady, if unspectacular, progress. But two big factors power growth in an economy’s potential supply, and Brexit affects both. https://on.wsj.com/2DJ6eki