Why does the British government take the bank's worries about retreat?

One afternoon in mid-January, British Prime Minister Teresa Mui (Theresa May) entered a conference room in Davos, Switzerland, facing a group of Wall Street's most influential bankers.

Two days before, Teresa Maya presented her vision of the UK's exit from the EU's single market. Now, those worried that the UK will run into trouble with Wall Street bankers and would like to hear some of her strategies.

That may be related to the future of London as a global financial center. Including Lloyd Blankfein, CEO of Goldman Sachs Group, Jamie Dimon, JP Morgan CEO, and James Gorman, Morgan Stanley's chief executive.

According to the two bankers who knew the meeting and a government official, the Blanche Vatican was the most direct. Blanc Vancouver grew up in Bronx, New York, where he worked as a gold trader, struggling to climb, and finally became one of the world's most influential investment banks - Goldman Sachs.

"Said Frank Brave, where the financial services industry is ranked in the list of priority issues in the Teresa Meyer." According to a bank manager who listened to the boss briefing the day. "We are contributing twice the percentage of UK gross domestic product (GDP), and we are the largest taxpayer in the UK."

The source said that Teresa May responded to the importance of the financial services industry, but did not directly answer the question. After the meeting some bankers still doubt her promise.

Teresa May and the banks did not comment on the meeting.

Over the past 20 years, as with the other 250 foreign banks in the UK, Goldman Sachs has placed its European business focus on London in order to take advantage of the European single market with economies of scale up to $ 16.5 trillion (trillion).

These banks will lose access to the 500 million population market; after Teresa Mei suggested that her priority is to control the immigration, and only to withdraw from the EU to achieve this.

After the British referendum back to Europe, some senior bankers look forward to the British government's special preferential treatment. They hope that British officials can put the financial industry on all other industries, to maintain financial services unrestricted access to a single European market. But backfire Reuters learned that bankers and other British government officials conducted a series of meetings also bleak end.

Bankers say British government officials do not understand the financial industry and interest, nor do they want to hear negative news about Britain's return to Europe. "We have entered a serious risk," said a European executive at a global investment bank. "Some of the officials of the British government are overconfident."

In a statement, the British Prime Minister's Office responded to the conclusion of the article, saying the government "does not endorse this claim." The statement said the government is in close contact with the financial services industry.