The UK is proposing “significant changes to the listing rulebook” in a bid to make London more attractive as a financial center as moribund capital markets stoke fears about the city’s ability to compete with New York and Asian hubs.
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) wants to replace its premium and standard listing categories with a single offering in a bid to attract more companies, it said in a statement on Tuesday.
The regulator said the changes would make UK listings less complicated and onerous. It would make it easier for companies to have two classes of shares, which is favored by some entrepreneurs who want to keep control of their businesses even after they have gone public, and would remove mandatory shareholder votes, including on acquisitions.
Photo: Reuters
The proposals follow a dramatic drop in the number of new listings in London and as other companies seek to move their shares to New York, sparking concerns about whether the UK can retain its place as one of the world’s biggest financial centers after Brexit.
Any reduction in rules would shrink investors’ protections and that requires a wider public debate, the FCA said.
“Our proposed reforms would significantly rebalance the burden of regulation to the benefit of listed companies and investors who are willing to set their own risk appetite and terms of officer engagement,” FCA chief executive officer Nikhil Rathi said.
The Square Mile welcomed the proposal, but urged more changes.
“The work mustn’t stop here,” City of London Corp policy chairman Chris Hayward said.
British Economic Secretary to the Treasury Andrew Griffith described the move as “an important step forward,” adding in a statement that “it is important our rule book keeps pace with practices elsewhere.”
The FCA already imposed a string of reforms after Jonathan Hill’s listings review in 2021, including lowering the required free float and allowing some dual share classes.
It has now launched a fresh consultation until June 28 over potentially doing away with additional burdens involved in a premium listing, which have historically made companies eligible for inclusion in FTSE indices.
Implementing the outcome of the consultation would happen later this year or early next year.
“If implemented, London would be able to stand toe to toe with our international competitors,” Hill said in a statement. “I agree that we certainly need to have a wider debate about risk and growth.”
In a speech at the Global Investment Management Summit in London in March, Rathi said that “politically and culturally,” questions needed to be asked whether various parties are comfortable moving to a system dependent on disclosure rather than detailed rules.
“If we move down this route, there will need to be clear acceptance that some investors, even those who do read and understand every word of the disclosure, will lose money,” Rathi said. “When these events happen, there can be no question of compensation for those investors left nursing losses on the grounds of perceived regulatory failure.”
His comments come amid a highly charged debate about London’s future.
A decision by Cambridge-based technology company Arm Ltd to list in New York after considering a premium dual listing in the UK and the US sparked criticism of the FCA for not relaxing related party transaction rules — a condition Arm was reported to have wanted.
Dublin-based CRH PLC, one of Europe’s biggest building materials companies, is moving its primary listing to New York from the UK, while gambling company Flutter Entertainment PLC last week said it has secured shareholder backing to pursue an additional US listing.
Still, Deutsche Bank AG’s decision to buy London-based broker Numis, which was announced on Friday last week, was seen as a vote of confidence in London’s long-term future.
The New Taiwan dollar is on the verge of overtaking the yuan as Asia’s best carry-trade target given its lower risk of interest-rate and currency volatility. A strategy of borrowing the New Taiwan dollar to invest in higher-yielding alternatives has generated the second-highest return over the past month among Asian currencies behind the yuan, based on the Sharpe ratio that measures risk-adjusted relative returns. The New Taiwan dollar may soon replace its Chinese peer as the region’s favored carry trade tool, analysts say, citing Beijing’s efforts to support the yuan that can create wild swings in borrowing costs. In contrast,
Nvidia Corp’s demand for advanced packaging from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) remains strong though the kind of technology it needs is changing, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) said yesterday, after he was asked whether the company was cutting orders. Nvidia’s most advanced artificial intelligence (AI) chip, Blackwell, consists of multiple chips glued together using a complex chip-on-wafer-on-substrate (CoWoS) advanced packaging technology offered by TSMC, Nvidia’s main contract chipmaker. “As we move into Blackwell, we will use largely CoWoS-L. Of course, we’re still manufacturing Hopper, and Hopper will use CowoS-S. We will also transition the CoWoS-S capacity to CoWos-L,” Huang said
Nvidia Corp CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) is expected to miss the inauguration of US president-elect Donald Trump on Monday, bucking a trend among high-profile US technology leaders. Huang is visiting East Asia this week, as he typically does around the time of the Lunar New Year, a person familiar with the situation said. He has never previously attended a US presidential inauguration, said the person, who asked not to be identified, because the plans have not been announced. That makes Nvidia an exception among the most valuable technology companies, most of which are sending cofounders or CEOs to the event. That includes
INDUSTRY LEADER: TSMC aims to continue outperforming the industry’s growth and makes 2025 another strong growth year, chairman and CEO C.C. Wei says Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), a major chip supplier to Nvidia Corp and Apple Inc, yesterday said it aims to grow revenue by about 25 percent this year, driven by robust demand for artificial intelligence (AI) chips. That means TSMC would continue to outpace the foundry industry’s 10 percent annual growth this year based on the chipmaker’s estimate. The chipmaker expects revenue from AI-related chips to double this year, extending a three-fold increase last year. The growth would quicken over the next five years at a compound annual growth rate of 45 percent, fueled by strong demand for the high-performance computing