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ANALYSIS

NEWS

04

|

THE INVESTOR

‘Brexit means Brexit’ has become one of the most-used slogans since the

June referendum, but it has not provided much illumination. Quite how, and

when, we will achieve the exit is no clearer now than after the vote.

Theresa May has said she will trigger Article 50 to start the two-year exit

process by the end of March 2017. But, despite her commitment at the

Conservative party conference that we would ‘have the freedom to make

our own decisions on a whole host of different matters’, there was little

clarity on what a post-Brexit UK would look like.

Initial economic fears have abated though, with many key indicators,

including consumer confidence, rebounding sharply after some initial

dislocation. But economists warn it is still too early to assess the long-term

implications. The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

admitted that swift action by the Bank of England (BoE), including an interest

rate cut, had helped stabilise markets, but said: ‘Uncertainty remains extremely

high and risks are clearly on the downside…the UK is projected to grow by

1.8% in 2016 and 1% in 2017, well below the pace of recent years.’

The BoE, in its September Monetary Policy Summary, said it still expected

growth to slow in the second half of 2016, adding: ‘While most business

investment intentions surveys weakened further since the August Inflation

Report, the near-term outlook for the housing market is less negative than

expected. Overall, these data remain consistent with the Committee’s

judgement [in the report] that business spending would slow more sharply

than consumer spending in response to the uncertainty.’

1

However, there are some early indications of faltering consumer confidence.

Private registrations of new cars fell 0.2% in August,

2

while house sales

dipped between June and July

3

. But the UK’s stock markets quickly rebounded

from a post-Brexit slump. Sterling has recovered slightly against the dollar and

euro but it remains some way below pre-referendum levels

4

.

1

bankofengland.co.uk,

September 2016

2

smmt.co.uk,

September 2016

3

gov.uk,

September 2016

4

bbc.co.uk,

September 2016

ECONOMY

HEADING TO THE BREXIT DOOR

Quite how, andwhen,

wewill achieve the

exit is no clearer

now than after

the vote