"We expect the vote to leave the EU to result in significant negative impact on UK growth. Our revised baseline growth expectation for the UK is 1.5 per cent in 2016 and 1.2 per cent in 2017, compared with previous estimates of 1.8 per cent and 2.1 per cent respectively," Moody's said in a report today.
Moody's said the June 23 vote of the British electorate to leave the European Union (EU) has heightened uncertainty and a significant negative impact on UK growth prospects.
Moody's said a material correction in asset prices, house price downturn or a large decline in consumption represent downside risks to the forecast, and if they materialize then it
would prompt the rating agency to revise the baseline.
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Stating that it expects limited spillovers to EU growth overall, Moody's said direct trade and real economy linkages between UK and the EU are asymmetric, with UK exposures to the European Union much larger than EU exposures to Britain.
"Therefore, assuming manageable global financial markets turbulence, there will be limited spillovers to the large EU economies," it said.
Reflecting country-specific developments combined with limited spillovers from Brexit, Moody's has lowered its growth forecasts for Germany, France, Italy and Spain by 0.0 per cent-0.4 per cent.
"Overall, we have lowered our euro area growth expectations to 1.5 per cent for 2016 and 1.3 per cent for 2017, from 1.7 per cent and 1.6 per cent previously," it said.
possibility of a recession in the UK, but from the possibility that developments in the UK may give rise to increased political risk elsewhere in the EU," it said.
In the report 'Global Macro Outlook Update: EU Political Contagion Represents the Greatest Risk to Otherwise Muted Global Impact from Brexit', Moody's said its size makes the EU systemically important to the world economy and the US. The materialization of negative risks in the EU would, therefore, have significant consequences for global trade and growth.
Since the vote, global equity indices have mostly recovered from their post-Brexit lows, corporate spreads have tightened and capital flows to emerging markets have remained stable.