
Revolut blames Brexit as it shifts one million trading customers from London to Lithuania
The fintech company plans to transfer all of its European Economic Area customers by the end of the year

Can't read it @caLLous - post it in full here?
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Revolut blames Brexit as it shifts one million trading customers from…
archived 14 Oct 2022 17:54:14 UTCarchive.ph
Revolut,some random companyone of the UK's biggest fintech companies, cannot provide services to its EU customers from the UK because of "legislation introduced after the United Kingdom’s departure from the European Union" so is having to move them to a business it had to spin up last year because of Brexit. Not sure what it has to do with minimum wages, it's a passporting issue more than anything.
I hope they don't fail, I love Revolut, it's a really good service.
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Revolut blames Brexit as it shifts one million trading customers from…
archived 14 Oct 2022 17:54:14 UTCarchive.ph
Revolut,some random companyone of the UK's biggest fintech companies, cannot provide services to its EU customers from the UK because of "legislation introduced after the United Kingdom’s departure from the European Union" so is having to move them to a business it had to spin up last year because of Brexit. Not sure what it has to do with minimum wages, it's a passporting issue more than anything.
Sounds like marketing. In reality, they simply don't have positive cash flow
The CEO said he doesn't want the IPO until they hit a certain revenue target (which is like 5-6x of their last actual revenue) but they're "worth" £30bn according to funding rounds. It sounds like it's run more like a snazzy tech startup than a financial institution and there's hesitance (reluctance?) from the FCA to issue them with a UK licence.They don't need positive cash flow because they are (were?) funded by cheap money like lots of other digital "unicorns". But, we're in stormy seas and I would imagine Revolut has been highly exposed to lots of issues at once; Brexit and the crypto crash would be two major ones. They were actually supposed to IPO this year, but that's all gone quiet.
The CEO said he doesn't want the IPO until they hit a certain revenue target (which is like 5-6x of their last actual revenue) but they're "worth" £30bn according to funding rounds. It sounds like it's run more like a snazzy tech startup than a financial institution and there's hesitance (reluctance?) from the FCA to issue them with a UK licence.
It was said this was going to deliver a “gold standard” of sustainable fisheries and make Britain a “world leader” in protecting the sea. The result has been rather different. Last December ministers and officials signed an agreement with the EU that allowed 65% of all catch limits to be set above scientific advice.
They told us that a short supply of labour would push up wages but seem reluctant to actually do that. Whoda thunk it?![]()
Brexit-backing Next boss says UK needs more overseas workers
Lord Wolfson urges the government to let more foreign workers into the UK to tackle labour shortages.www.bbc.com
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London Loses Crown of Biggest European Stock Market to Paris
London has lost another status symbol. It’s no longer home to Europe’s biggest stock market.www.bloomberg.com
This about the London stock market falling behind Paris.Meh - copy/paste past the paywall, @Wij ?
Revenue:Take LVMH out of the equation - and Royal Dutch Shell if you insist - and the LSE is still significantly larger.