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London to Relax Listing Rules to Attract Tech IPOs and Blank-Check Companies. What That Means. - Barron's

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The U.K. review suggests loosening listing rules to make London more competitive following Brexit.

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The U.K. is set to make sweeping changes to London listing rules post-Brexit, aimed at attracting technology initial public offerings and lifting a key barrier that has stopped special-purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) from choosing the country.

A government-backed review, published on Wednesday, set out the need for the U.K. to act to ensure London doesn’t fall behind key European financial centers like Amsterdam and lose further ground to the U.S. and Asia.

Lord Jonathan Hill, conducting the review, said the proposals were designed to encourage investment in U.K. businesses, benefit companies who choose to float in London, and improve the city’s competitive position. “We need to encourage more of the growth companies of the future to list here in the U.K.,” wrote the former European Union commissioner for financial services in a letter to Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak.

Key recommendations in the review include:

  • Introducing dual-class share ownership to let founders keep greater voting power, designed to attract tech company listings.
  • Reducing free float requirements—the amount of a company’s shares that are in public hands—from 25% to 15%—meaning founders need to sell fewer shares to list.
  • Liberalizing the rules regarding SPACs, with appropriate safeguards for investors.

One of the most closely watched recommendations will be the move to relax rules around SPACs, which have surged in popularity in the U.S., which completed a record $109 billion of transactions globally in February alone, according to data from Refinitiv.

Read:4 SPAC Mergers Worth $16 Billion Were Announced in One Day

SPACs raise equity via initial public offerings and then hunt for private companies to buy or merge with, before taking them public. They have two years to strike a deal or they have to return the cash, which is held in trust, to their investors.

Under current U.K. rules, blank-check companies must suspend trading once they have made an acquisition, which means investors are locked in even if they don’t approve of the deal. The review recommends that regulator the Financial Conduct Authority consults on lifting the suspension requirement. That would bring London more in line with New York.

Last month, Nasdaq updated its rules to enable listing of SPACs on the Nordic stock exchanges. Under the new measures, trading in SPAC shares won’t be halted once a deal is announced, allowing investors to cash out if they don’t approve of the target. Nasdaq is considering similar rules for Helsinki, Copenhagen and Reykjavik, which should help boost the number of SPACs choosing Europe as their destination to list.

The U.K. review, which was commissioned last November by Sunak, also suggests loosening listing rules to make London more competitive following Brexit.

Hill noted that London accounted for only 5% of global IPOs between 2015 and 2020, adding that the city now faces stiff competition from elsewhere in Europe as well as the U.S. and Asia.

He added that the composition of the FTSE Index, dominated by miners and major oil companies, was also of concern. “The most significant companies listed in London are either financial or more representative of the ‘old economy’ than the companies of the future. At one point last summer, Apple alone was worth more than the combined value of every company in the FTSE 100,” he said.

In a bid to turn the tide, the review recommends allowing companies to sell “dual-class” shares in the premium listing segment of the London Stock Exchange, a structure that helped Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange attract the likes of Facebook, Snap and Alphabet.

That would mean founders could retain control over their companies by giving them deciding votes on major decisions such as mergers and acquisitions. The review recommends safeguards such as a five-year limit.

Despite calls for change to listing rules, the LSE has had its strongest start to a year since 2006, with 11 IPOs raising £3.24 billion in the year to Feb. 24, according to its own data. Those included cult boot maker Dr. Martens and online greeting-cards platform Moonpig Group.

AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould said that on the face of it the proposals boost London as it fights for market share with Amsterdam, Paris, Frankfurt and other venues in a post-Brexit world. However, he said loosening regulations should be treated with caution.

“SPAC deals may be booming in the USA right now, but fear of missing out (FOMO) is just about the worst possible reason for making any investment decision. To let this emotion drive a change in the rules with regards to SPACs in particular would potentially expose investors to greater danger and the risk of portfolio losses,” he said.

“The FCA’s job is therefore to ensure that quality control remains paramount as it looks to balance the understandable desire to foster the next generation of corporate winners with the need to protect investors, and do so at a time when some corners of the market are looking frothy.”

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