Lou Jiwei, China's minister of finance said repercussions and fallout of Brexit decision will emerge in the next five to 10 years
Demand for a fresh vote was so high that it crashed parliament.Uk website with 1,00,000 signatures being added per hour
Javid was also pushed on his predictions during the referendum campaign that half a million jobs would be lost
Marketmen expect the overhang of Brexit this week and the derivative expiry may add to the uneasiness
Property prices are also expected to take a hit, with reports of buyers pulling out of transactions due to market uncertainty
He warned that Brexit victory would send the pound down by 10-15%; pound sterling fell 10% on Friday
Country's airlines soared under EU's Single European Sky system over past two decades
Central bankers gathered at organisation's global economy meeting in Switzerland discussed implications of the referendum
Stock markets around the world plunged in the wake of the referendum while the Sterling's value also plummeted
A day after Brexit vote, EU foreign ministers meet to assert that the bloc wants to move on without the UK
Mahindra feels that the post-Brexit negotiations are an opportunity to design a more practical global template for common markets
In case EU imposes curbs on trade with UK, Indian tea trade may suffer further German blend will reduce
Britain's gains from being in the European Union significantly exceeded its losses. Withdrawal from the group will trigger several negative outcomes for the country
"There is no reason why a sensible arrangement couldn't be put in place for passporting to continue"
Well, the Brits have really done it now. All the experts told us people in the UK were smart enough to see that voting to leave the European Union was a mistake - but not to worry because the referendum was going to lose. I once again must invoke the wisdom of screen writer William Goldman, who as regular readers will know summed up almost everything you need to know with the world's three most important words (no, not those words - see Item 7 below). That said, here's how I see it:1. London, get used to itIt was a back and forth between New York and London in the bidding to be the capital of capitalism. That race just ended. This may be good for New York and Hong Kong in some abstract way, but more likely the centre of European financial gravity will shift to Geneva or Brussels or Frankfurt; or maybe no one city replaces London and financial power is scattered all over Europe. London's ambition to be the world's most important city is now over. Expect it to become more like Colonial
The pound fell to its lowest in more than 30 years, driving demand for assets such as US Treasuries and gold
The unexpected windfall could offer a small silver lining as export-driven corporate Japan braces for economic uncertainty
'You can't have your cake and eat it', says Dutch minister; UK referendum was a "crazy idea," adds Italian politician
Hill said he was disappointed by the vote and would ensure a handover before leaving on July 15
Investors looking for financial safety have found it in gold