May 18, 2023
Taken from an article published by CityAM, on 18 May 2023, which can be found here: The London Stock Exchange has now passed the zenith of its global influence (cityam.com)
In an effort to
eliminate financial risks through regulation, we’ve also eliminated returns.
The London Stock Exchange is suffering the consequences of such a risk-averse
approach, writes Roger Clarke
Rule changes
announced by the Financial Conduct Authority, to encourage companies to list in
the UK, suggest the watchdog is starting to understand that a culture that
seeks to eliminate risk completely will succeed in eliminating returns
completely, hampering UK investment appetite.
An unintended
consequence of years of creeping regulation to remove risk for investors has
also expunged the entrepreneurial spirit from the financial markets which once
established London’s dominant position. Investors can and should be trusted to
take responsibility for their investment decisions. Regulated markets are
essential; risk-free markets are an illusion.
The FCA’s move
follows the decision by the owner of the poster child for United Kingdom tech
innovation, ARM Holdings, now owned by Japan’s SoftBank, to return to the stock
market in New York rather than London.
The doom and
gloom represented by the London Stock Exchange has only intensified. Last month
top fund manager and co-founder of Lindsell Train, Nick Train fanned the flames
by updating investors in his £1.9bn Finsbury Growth & Income Trust by
saying the UK has an “unwelcome reputation as a backwater in 21st century
equity markets.”
Train also
pointed to our dearth of “significant technology champions” and the UK’s
“dismal capital performance”, adding up to a few grim weeks, as bank and
property stocks were hit in the wake of crises at Credit Suisse and Silicon
Valley Bank.
But are we
obsessing too much about an exchange which boasts of its“trust and innovation
since 1698”, a timewhen John Castaing’s Coffee House in the City of London
started to publish a list of currency, stock and commodity prices including
gold, ducats and pieces of eight? Twenty years ago it played a far more central
role in national life and the investment world. In the early 2000s UK
institutional investors typically saw 50 to 60 per cent of their holdings in
equities, with two thirds of this money invested in British companies.
In 2002, former
Chancellor Gordon Brown changed pension solvency rules to remove tax relief,
which allowed pension funds to claim back the tax paid on dividends from
companies in which they owned shares. This immediately raked in a £5bn annual
windfall for the Treasury. Now it can be seen as the beginning of the end of UK
equities investing which hit its zenith in the 1980s with the mass market
flotations of the likes of British “Tell Sid” Gas and British Telecom.
This sum was
partially offset by other tax reductions, but it did place a burden on
pensions. We have since seen a slow decline in the value of the UK stock market
since it reached an all-time combined market capitalisation high of $4.2tn in
October 2007, according to CEIC data.
In March this
year, the market cap of UK listed companies was $2.8tn, compared with $40.7tn
in the US. First, we need to see more support for start-ups and growing
companies rather than bemoaning the likes of ARM Holdings opting to re-list in
New York .
The Quoted
Companies Alliance has some strong ideas, calling for less of the onerous
regulation of small companies which now sees the average annual report
totalling 95,000 words and 173 pages.
An average
listed company’s annual report is now longer than a Jane Austen book. Who is
reading these tomes and how much are they, and red tape, hindering the creation
of the ARMs of the future?
In their
defence, the London Stock Exchange launched its UK Capital Markets Industry
Taskforce in July 2022 and before this the government had announced reviews of
the Financial Services Future Regulatory Framework, UK Fintech and UK Listing,
feeding into the Primary Markets Effectiveness Review.
We also need to
focus more on a sector where London continues to be the biggest in Europe: real
estate. Over long periods real estate has proven to perform better than
equities and gilts yet buying a stake in your local landmark building is only
an option for the super-rich.
Here in London,
we have created the world’s only dedicated stock exchange for real estate
assets and portfolios where three companies are now admitted and one more is
due to float. After this next IPO, there will be £600m of real estate assets
across the United Kingdom traded on IPSX.
The UK is
investable and can attract global capital: we just need to support and promote
the innovators with new ideas, and government and regulators need to remember
that the large cap main market of the London Stock Exchange is not all that
matters in our capital markets.
We hope that the FCA’s moves are the first step in a long road back to throwing off the shackles that have enveloped the City over the last 10 years.
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