REUTERS/StringerA militant Islamist fighter uses a mobile to film his fellow fighters taking part in a military parade along the streets of Syria’s northern Raqqa province June 30, 2014.
Business leaders across Europe see the geopolitical risks being caused by the likes of ISIS (also known as the Islamic State) and the ongoing European refugee crisis as the biggest threats to success for their businesses right now.In Britain, Brexit risks are scarier than anything, according to Deloitte’s latest European CFO Survey.
The report is a major look into the challenges facing the financial success of the biggest companies in Europe in 2016 and it shows that geopolitics dominates the minds of Europe’s largest finance officers.
Deloitte says that the survey — which was carried out between January and March this year — presents “insights from nearly 1,500 CFOs based across 17 European countries on critical business concerns including capital markets and funding, business risk appetite and overall market sentiment.”
1,500 CFOs from the whole continent may not seem like a huge number but the survey is a pretty good indicator as it includes bosses from some of the biggest listed companies in Europe’s most important economies, providing a handy indicator of overall sentiment.
While geopolitics dominate, increased regulation, weak currencies, fears about financial systems, and deflation, are also seen as big risks on a country-to-country basis, as a great chart from the survey shows. Take a look:
Deloitte
Unsurprisingly, in Britain, the country’s EU referendum is seen as by far the biggest risk to business right now, with more CFO’s citing it as a risk than anything else.
Here’s Deloitte: “In the UK, CFOs rank Brexit as the most significant risk for their business. This seems likely to have influenced the decline in UK CFO sentiment across the board (financial prospects -5pp, risk appetite -44pp, revenue expectations -23pp, operating margins -32pp, employment growth -41pp) in a period of already high uncertainty (+11pp).”
The Brexit referendum is dominating the UK agenda right now, with businesses and politicians alike devoting much time to worrying about the result of the vote. Despite this, as Deloitte’s UK only CFO survey showed in April, many of the UK’s biggest companies are unprepared for Brexit.