coming up next, nina schick.cine: this is "bloomberg surveillance," i am in london and tom keene is in new york. the brexit secretary acosta's the first of 80 papers today outlining a different sector should prepare for a collapse in talks with eu. isb will signal that he wanting life to continue as normal. he is confident a good deal is achievable. that is a view not shared by the general public. most brits saying that u.k. will leave the eu without accord, planning to cut costs. nina, let me kick this off with you. are we at a point where in u.k. politics the bar is so low that even if it is a bad deal it will seem better than no deal? nina: what you're seeing in terms of the shift in public opinion is voters and conservative voters are starting to think that no matter where we end up in talks, it will not be a good outcome. you are not seeing a huge shift in public opinion in terms of people calling for second referendum but people think -- uh oh, the optimism after the referendum is declining and especially a