This is what Britain losing investment looks like - but it also helps explain the Brexit vote

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Demonstrators opposing Britain's exit from the European Union in Parliament Square following yesterday's EU referendum result hold a protest in London, Saturday, June 25, 2016. Britain voted to leave the European Union after a bitterly divisive referendum campaign. (AP Photo/Tim Ireland)

Tim Ireland / AP/Press Association Images

Demonstrators opposing Britain's exit from the European Union in Parliament Square.

South East Asia's third largest bank, United Overseas Bank, has stopped funding mortgages for UK properties, one of the first examples of investment in Britain drying up in the wake of the Brexit vote.

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The Times quotes a spokesperson for the Singapore lender as saying: "As the aftermath of the UK referendum is still unfolding and given the uncertainties, we need to ensure our customers are cautious with their London property investments."

The Remain campaign argued prior to last week's referendum on the UK's membership of the EU that if we vote to leave investment in Britain could shrink. This is a concrete example of that - money sitting in a Singaporean bank that could have ended up London's property market is now staying put.

But while this will come as a blow to estate agents in the UK capital's most exclusive postcodes, for ordinary people this drying up of investment could actually be seen as a good thing.

Many political commentators have argued that the Brexit vote was less a vote against the EU specifically and more an expression of anger at the status quo from people who feel they've been let down and left behind by a system that only really caters to the rich and well-educated.

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Most of this anger at the top is found in "Middle England" - the towns and rural areas across the country that aren't part of a big city. But even London, a Remain stronghold, has its share of anger at the system.

House prices have spiralled in the capital since the 2008 financial crash and this has led to anger among the young who feel they are being priced out of the market by wealthy foreign buyers who are crowding the market. The press has even dubbed this group "Generation Rent."

The average London property price passed £600,000 for the first time at the beginning of June, according to Land Registry data. Properties in London are now almost 60% more costly than they were prior to the 2008 financial crisis.

Many young Londoners may feel that stopping Singapore investors buying up properties in the capital might not be such a bad thing after all and the wider country will likely have sympathy for their grievances. While it is an example of "investment" drying up, too many properties in London are being bought as simply "investments" - empty homes just sitting their accruing value.

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