That uncertainty is the same today as it was last week. The delivery hasn't arrived yet.
As I said you patently don't understand it.
The uncertainty of the decision, which saw the markets tank when it looked like Brexit were winning and then recover strongly when it appeared that they were going to lose at the death (which should give you a clue). Have now been replaced by the certainty of Brexit and all of the massive uncertainty that brings with it.
You leavers were warned about this before the vote but chose to trust chumps like Farage, who offered no positive tangible view of what would happen post Brexit.
Instead him and his cohorts tried to ridicule the predictions of virtually every economic expert who predicted a gloomy outcome, as hyperbole and doom mongering. They tried to make out that economics was a black art, and used the 2008 crash to try and justify this absolute bollocks - well they didn't see that coming, ergo their view is not worth listening to.
Only 2008 was primarily caused by Sherman's bundling up ****e debt in bonds sold all over the globe causing a crisis that few could have predicted - however, once the crash started the economists could accurately predict what would happen - and did, as its basic economics not some mystical bullshit.
They did the same with Brexit.
The pound will fall - already happening
Therefore exports will cost more and we have a trade deficit = inflation
Inflation = cost of living increases = less disposable income
Consumer confidence also falls due to the uncertainty = less spending
The 2 combined = a shrinking economy and a fall in GDP
Inflation needs to be controlled = interest rate rises
Creates yet more contraction
Contraction = job losses
Job losses = further contraction
Lack of overseas investment = further contraction
The public purse reduces and unemployment rises = massive reduction in public spending
This is how it'll pan out, vault me on it. As its not some mysterious black art, it's basic ****ing economics