2024 sees biggest exodus from London stock market since global financial crisis
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Last year was one of the quietest on record for the London Stock Exchange, which saw the largest outflow of companies since the global financial crisis, stark new analysis shows. Takeaway giant Just Eat, Paddy Power owner Flutter, travel group Tui, and equipment rental firm Ashtead were among those to announce plans to ditch their main UK listing.
The London Stock Exchange (LSE) saw 88 companies delist or transfer their primary listing from the main market – the most since 2009, according to data from auditing giant EY. A number of these firms said declining liquidity and lower valuations were key reasons for moving away from London, particularly to the US which offers more capital and trading activity, EY said.
Betting giant Flutter Entertainment switched its primary listing to New York, where it said it could access the “world’s deepest and most liquid capital markets”. Just Eat Takeaway abandoned its listing on the LSE altogether, citing the “administrative burden, complexity and costs” associated with keeping its shares in London as one of the reasons to quit.
Other companies such as Watches of Switzerland faced pressure from activist investors to swap their main stock market listing to the US. A flurry of companies exiting or moving their primary listing to foreign markets was compounded by a shortage of companies launching their shares in 2024.
There were a total of 18 new listings, known as initial public offerings (IPOs), in London last year, EY found. This was the lowest volume of listings since EY started recording the data in 2010, and five times less than the number that delisted or transferred elsewhere.