Scotland Votes NO to Independence in Referendum
Sunday, September 21, 2014
Belsize Accountancy in UK Economy, financial markets

Scotland voted No to Independence in the Referendum last week. The vote turned out to be closer than was originally envisaged with 55% of the Scottish public voting No compared to 45% calling for a Yes vote.

The potential for a Yes vote for Scotland to break up from the UK gave rise to significant uncertainty and was met with a temporary drop in both the equity markets and to the value of the Pound. A successful Yes vote would have led to ramifications of a potential capital flight from Scotland due to uncertainty over whether the country would seek to use its own currency or join the Euro.

The rejection of Independence was followed by a sharp rise in the Pound on Friday and companies with Scottish links generated a rally to the FTSE 100 in the financial markets. Shares in the Royal Bank of Scotland, SSE, Weir and Standard Life were all up by approximately 2-3% following the news.

Turnout to the referendum on Scottish independence hit a record high for any election held in the UK since 1918 with a participation rate of 85%.

Article originally appeared on Belsize Accountancy (https://belsizeaccountancy.co.uk/).
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