Of course any downturn in the economy will have an effect on most retailers.
So you accept then that the downturn in the economy (reduced growth, loss of consumer confidence, increased costs for retailers that import products to sell) that we are already seeing will detrimentally accept the retail sector, albeit with some individual companies bucking the overall trend.
In which case you will need to retract your earlier comment that:
'the field i do work in, furniture retail stands to gain'
Sure your particular company might be one of those that bucks the trend (in part because others may go out of business) but the overall affect on the furniture retail sector is negative.
Its not speculative, Australia is already keen to crack on.
Of course it is speculative
How many new deals so we have in place - zero.
How many new deals are close to completion - zero.
How many negotiations on new deals have formally started - zero.
In fact we don't even have sufficient experience trade negotiators in the UK to have any hope of negotiating multiple deals in any serious timeframe. I gather we have less than 20.
Yes makes sense, see what deals could be done, what is on offer from the EU then maybe the debate starts again.
No - that is the debate. Prior to the referendum the debate was in fantasy land cake and eat it territory. That isn't a debate, merely wishful thinking (we can have full access to the free market and significant limitations to freedom of movement).
We are now into the real debate - if we leave which is more important - access to the free market (I think you'd support that one) or restrictions on freedom of movement (clearly JK's line in the sand). You can't have both - we have to face up to reality rather than wishful thinking fantasy.