LONDON (Reuters) - Prime Minister Theresa May pledged on Monday to address business concerns that Britain could fall off a “cliff edge” into uncertain trading conditions after leaving the EU, hinting at some form of a transitional agreement.

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May addresses the Confederation of British Industry's (CBI) annual conference in London, November 21, 2016. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth

It was the strongest sign yet that May could be open to a deal that would offer Britain time to forge a new trading relationship with the European Union when the up to two-year formal divorce talks are concluded, most likely in 2019.

Speaking to business leaders at the CBI, a leading business organization in Britain, May moved to ease concerns among company bosses who had been alarmed by a plan to put workers on boards and to tackle excessive executive pay.

But she would not be moved to reveal more of her negotiating hand before she triggers Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty to launch two years of formal divorce talks, saying business leaders should understand better than anyone that she did not want anything to jeopardize winning the “right” deal.

Asked about business calls for a transitional deal, she said: “We want to get the arrangement that is going to work best for the UK and the arrangement that is going to work best for business in the UK.”

“I am conscious that there will be issues that need to be looked at ... that people don’t want a cliff edge, they want to know with some certainty how things are going to go forward, that will be part of the work that we do in terms of the negotiation.”

Her spokeswoman later said: “There are a whole range of issues that are being worked through as we prepare for the negotiations, with a focus of looking at how we get the best deal for the UK.”

EU officials say they have always assumed that Britain will need some transitional deal to bridge the gap between the withdrawal treaty and a new one setting out a long-term relationship, which they expect to take many years to negotiate.

CLOCK STRIKES MIDNIGHT

May’s words seemed to be a direct response to the president of the CBI, Paul Drechsler, who said business needed certainty over Britain’s future relationship with the EU’s single market and immigration rules for “European talent”.

“And there’s another important question: what happens the day after Brexit? When the clock strikes midnight, and our two years negotiating time is up. Today businesses are inevitably considering this cliff edge scenario - a sudden and overnight transformation in trading conditions,” he said.

“If this happens firms could find themselves stranded in a regulatory no mans land.”

May, who was appointed prime minister shortly after Britain voted in June to leave the EU, has been clear that she will deliver Brexit, but she has offered little detail.

Some pro-Brexit campaigners have warned the prime minister that she risks betraying the “will of the people” if she allows any delay to Brexit.

“Businesses want certainty as soon as possible, which is why Britain must leave the EU within a maximum period of two years after triggering Article 50 – no EU deal is better than a bad deal,” said Richard Tice, a businessman and co-chairman of campaign group, Leave Means Leave.

“A transitional deal will fuel more uncertainty and leave Britain in limbo.”

Keen to make sure her government stays on message, May has silenced her ministers, some of whom have given the strongest hints yet that she is not ruling out a form of transitional agreement with the EU.

In parliament on Oct. 20, May’s Brexit minister, David Davis, said the stability of the City of London financial district and markets was “absolutely central” and the government would do “anything necessary”.

“I am sure that everybody here in this room who’s been involved in negotiations know that you don’t set out absolutely everything that you want to do right at the beginning of the negotiation,” she said.

“So when I am able to make announcements about decisions ... then I will do so.”