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THE INVESTOR

25TH ANNIVERSARY

A referendum in the United Kingdom resulted in a vote in

favour of leaving the European Union. Despite opinion polls

predicting a victory for remainers, 52% voted to leave. England

andWales voted to leave, with Scotland and Northern Ireland

voting to remain. The result led to rapid political change –

Prime Minister David Cameron resigned the day after the vote

and was succeeded byTheresa May. She replaced Chancellor

George Osborne with Philip Hammond when she named her

first Cabinet. She also appointed Leave campaigner David Davis

to head up a new Brexit department. May said she would

triggerArticle 50, starting the two-year exit process, in March

2017; but challenges questioning the

legality of leaving the EU without a

parliamentary vote may delay that.The

result of the referendum led to a sharp

fall in stock markets, although this was

quickly reversed, and to a weakening

of sterling against both the euro and

the dollar. Details of how Brexit will be

achieved, including whether the UK will

remain a member of the single market,

controls on immigration and trading

relationships with other countries, have

still to be agreed.

ISSUE90 | SUMMER 2016

LIFTING THE LIDON BREXIT

THE POST-REFERENDUM

INVESTMENT LANDSCAPE

Cover_brexit_SJPSummer16_v13.indd 1

01/07/2016 09:49

ISSUE 90

SUMMER

We homed in on

how the UK’s future

relationship with its

European neighbours

might look following

the Brexit vote

IN THROUGH

THE OUT DOOR

Political earthquake hits the UK as the

pollsters are proved wrong when the

public pushes the Brexit button to leave

the European Union

ST. JAMES’S PLACE IN NUMBERS

1

23 June 2016

BREXIT DOOR

The then UKIP

leader Nigel Farage

celebrates the

historic vote to

leave the European

Union with his

supporters

1 All figures correct September 2016, except number of fund managers, which is correct October 2016