Syntagma Digital
Moneyizor
LSE Latest

ICAP Considers Move for London Stock Exchange

Michael Spencer, head of the world’s largest inter-dealer broker, ICAP, has suggested he may not sit idly by after Nasdaq’s move on the London Stock Exchange yesterday.

ICAP held abortive talks with the LSE during the summer. However, discussing ICAP’s £400 million takeover of currency trading platform EBS last year, Spencer commented : “The combination of ICAP and EBS networks provides ICAP with a distinctive capability — a high-speed global network for distribution of products that are increasingly traded around the clock.

“Almost all other businesses, the inter-dealer brokers and the exchanges, lack this global capability. Consolidation in these markets continues and ICAP remains in a very strong position.”

He added: “The group remains highly cash-generative with a strong balance sheet.”

Spencer also remarked that the inter-dealer broker market is still growing rapidly. ICAP’s profits in the six months to September rose 23pc to £120.8 million on revenues 22pc higher at £543 million. The shares rose 8.5p to 495p, valuing the business at a shade over £3 billion.

Do you have a view? Leave a Comment

All-British Deal with Icap Discussed

A tie-up between the London Stock Exchange and Icap, the world’s largest inter-dealer broker, has been discussed during the summer, it has emerged.

Icap is expected to confirm today that talks have taken place. The main sticking point seems to be the current share price of the LSE, which, at more than £12 ($22.56), has all but doubled this year.

A merger would create a formidable all-British heavyweight valued at £6 billion ($11.28bn), with a strong derivatives base. It would, at a stroke, make up for the strategic defeat of losing Liffe to Euronext.

However, the complementary nature of the parties means that cost savings would be hard to find. Whereas Nasdaq might justify the high price of a bid (£12.43 is the floor price it must pay in the near term) by savings derived from rationalization, Icap would see a dilution in value after any deal.

Clara Furse, the LSE chief executive, has a lot of balls in the air as the autumn season gets underway. Buying the Scandinavian exchange OMX, is one option; various possibilities involving private-equity outfits also beckon, plus the tempting prize of Icap.

Over-arching all, however, is the American Nasdaq, which, with 25.3pc stake and a clear field of play from next Monday, remains the one to be beaten.

Do you have a view? Leave a Comment