Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Cyprus Stock Exchange seeks a makeover

Nicosia bourse pinning hopes on privatisat­ion and corporate bond market to recover confidence

- By Kyriacos Kiliaris

The Cyprus Stock Exchange wants to shed its loser image by improving its game to support the economy ‘the way it should be doing’ with privatisat­ion and creating new markets.

The CSE board feels it’s time for the institutio­n to make the leap towards privatisat­ion, hoping that it will be pulled out of a two-decade stagnation to attract new companies, lifting Cyprus shares and the economy along with it.

Nicosia’s bourse hasn’t been able to move forward since the stock market crash in 2000 when thousands of Cypriots lost their savings; 13 years later, Cyprus was hit with a haircut on bank deposits to fend-off bankruptcy.

CSE Chairman Marinos Christodou­lides told the Financial Mirror, the Nicosia bourse is soon to be privatised, following the results of a study, commission­ed by the Ministry of Finance. The study showed that the future of the Cyprus bourse lies with privatisat­ion.

Christodou­lides said the plan is for the majority of the bourse’s stocks to be sold to a larger European stock market which will essentiall­y take over the CSE operations.

“A bigger European stock exchange will bring with its know-how, its technologi­cal solutions and of course will open up gateways to bigger markets.”

It is the board’s view that privatisat­ion of the institutio­n is imperative so that the strategic roadmap, drafted in the study, be implemente­d as soon as possible.

“However, this is a political decision that will need to be taken by the cabinet,” said Christodou­lides.

He said the CSE is not putting all its eggs in one basket with the privatisat­ion project, as it has decided to set up a corporate bond market, giving businesses domiciled in Cyprus an alternativ­e way to raise funds.

Christodou­lides said that with the implementa­tion of a corporate bond market, the role and the turnover of the stock market will also increase, although that is not the bourse’s primary goal.

“Currently, it is no secret, that businesses are dependent solely on borrowing from banks, as there is no alternativ­e.

We want to fill this gap and take on the role that a stock exchange market should play. Helping the economy grow by offering businesses the tools to raise the necessary funds.”

He added that the special defence levy imposed on corporate bond yields has been reduced from 30% to 3%, the same as government bonds.

This is expected to give the corporate bond market a push. Previously, companies did not issue bonds in the Cypriot market as they knew they would not be able to offer an attractive yield due to the levy. support from the state. The state should acknowledg­e the stock market as a key institutio­n for the growth of the economy and give the necessary support and incentives both to the institutio­n and to investors,” said Tripatsas.

Christodou­lides said the CSE has revenues from services it allocates to Ministries and government agencies, such as services to the Ministry of Finance for the public debt (such as interest payment, debt repayment, the process of introducin­g new debt securities).

Services to the Ministry of Agricultur­e include the auction of pollutant rights, while revenues are expected from the June 2020 opening of the Greek Stock Exchange, in which the CSE has a 10% share.

According to Christodou­lides, the CSE’s 2020 budget is marginally surplus, with revenue of EUR 5.9 mln and spending of EUR 5.87 mln.

Veteran broker Alkis Loizides argues the CSE is in desperate need of a makeover but does not see privatizat­ion as being enough to regain the loss of trust from investors, both small and institutio­nal.

“The institutio­n has taken more than one hit over the course of the past few years, with the public and institutio­nal investors now looking upon the Cyprus Stock Exchange as a timebomb waiting to blow up in their faces,” said Loizides.

He reminded that the country’s stock exchange has also suffered damage due to the collapse of the banking system with the haircut on deposits and bank bonds.

Loizides said for the CSE corporate bond market to takeoff, some well-governed companies need to register their bonds with the institutio­n.

“Companies which show their respect towards investors and personnel in practice, rather than in words. Companies who pay out their dividends and their coupons as expected from a well-governed company.”

He added: “Now is the right moment for the CSE and companies to do so. With interest on deposits being at an alltime low, corporate bonds can be an attractive and relatively safe investment.”

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