By Elizabeth Piper, REUTERS
In Summary
- Prime Minister David Cameron called the vote under pressure from his ruling Conservative Party and an increasingly powerful anti-EU party, hoping to put to rest decades of debate over Britain's place in Europe and its ties with Brussels.
- Traders, investors and companies are preparing for volatility on financial markets whatever the outcome of a vote that both reflects, and has fuelled, an anti-establishment mood also seen in the United States and elsewhere in Europe.
Britons were voting on Thursday to decide the future
of their country and Europe in a referendum on European Union membership
that has divided the nation and is being nervously watched by financial
markets and politicians across the world.
Opinion polls taken before the vote indicated the outcome is far too close to forecast.
Prime Minister David Cameron called the vote under
pressure from his ruling Conservative Party and an increasingly powerful
anti-EU party, hoping to put to rest decades of debate over Britain's
place in Europe and its ties with Brussels.
Most polls put the "Leave" and "Remain" camps
neck-and-neck at the end of a campaign that was dominated by immigration
and the economy, and shaken by the murder of a pro-EU MP, though late
on Wednesday two showed a swing to "Remain".
The "Leave" campaign says Britain's economy would
benefit from a Brexit, or British exit from the EU. Cameron says it
would cause financial chaos.
Traders, investors and companies are preparing for
volatility on financial markets whatever the outcome of a vote that both
reflects, and has fuelled, an anti-establishment mood also seen in the
United States and elsewhere in Europe.
Finance leaders from the Group of Seven leading
economies will issue a statement stressing their readiness to take all
necessary steps to calm markets if Britain votes to leave, government
officials with direct knowledge of the preparations said.
Britain's AAA credit rating could be swiftly
downgraded by Standard and Poor’s after a vote in favour of leaving the
EU, S&P chief sovereign ratings officer Moritz Kraemer told German
daily newspaper Bild.
Much will depend on turnout, with younger Britons seen as more supportive of the EU than their elders but less likely to vote.
"Go out and vote remain for a bigger, better
Britain inside a reformed European Union," Cameron told "Remain"
campaigners on Wednesday.
His main rival, former London mayor Boris Johnson,
whose decision to support "Leave" galvanized its campaign, told voters
this was the "last chance to sort this out".
Sterling rose to its highest so far this year
against the U.S. dollar late on Wednesday after one poll pointed to a
clear lead for "Remain" and betting markets priced in an 80 percent
chance Britain would not leave.
Polling stations for 382 local counting areas
opened at 0600 GMT and close at 2100, with most of the results expected
between around 0100 and 0300 on June 24.
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