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The City's status is under threat

April 4, 2012 17:31

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

1 min read

For the past 20 years London has been the preferred place for many international companies to list their shares. There are good reasons for this. London is the European headquarters of some of the world's biggest institutions responsible for issuing new shares - the investment banks - and the professional investors who buy them.

The accompanying nexus of advisory firms - the lawyers, accountants, and financial PR agencies - the language, and the time zone are also big attractions. Most important however is the City's regulatory framework, which over the years has become highly conducive to international companies who want to list a block of their shares on the LSE. All this is why, at its peak, there were more Indian, Chinese, Russian and Israeli companies listed here than in any other place in the world.

But London's pre-eminence is now under threat. New rules that are being forced through by an alliance of badly-burnt fund managers and over-zealous regulators are, according to many, destined to destroy the capital's competitiveness.

They are calling for the back door to London via the "reverse takeover" to be closed. They want the threshold for the "free float" - the proportion of a company's shares that can be freely traded - to be raised from the current 25 per cent, and for this threshold to be strictly enforced. There are also calls for a cooling-off period before a company's shares can be included in the FTSE indices. Needless to say, all those who have benefited from the boom in international listings, from the investment banks downwards, are up in arms.