Global Times

HK, London markets eye merger

▶ Deal would boost opening-up, China-UK ties: experts

- By GT staff reporters Page Editor: lixuanmin@globaltime­s.com.cn

Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) made an abrupt announceme­nt on Wednesday that it intends to merge with London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG), a move that could link the financial markets in the mainland, Hong Kong and London more closely, experts said.

HKEX made an offer for LSEG, valuing the latter at 29.6 billion pounds ($36.56 billion), according to an HKEX statement released on Wednesday.

“We are early in the process so I can’t go into too much detail at this stage, but after many months of considerat­ion we believe we have put forward a proposal that is ambitious, far-reaching, and could have a transforma­tive effect on global financial markets,” Charles Li Xiaojia, chief executive of HKEX, said in a statement on HKEX’s website on Wednesday.

Li called this announceme­nt “a significan­t milestone” for Hong Kong.

“Our city has shown time and time again that it thrives when competing against the top financial centers in the world, moving from its historic role as a regional center to a global hub,” Li wrote.

Li said that Hong Kong and London’s stock exchanges together will create a leading global exchange that “spans Asia, Europe and the US” with a market value of more than $70 billion. He also called the combinatio­n of the two stock exchanges “a great match.”

According to Li, the partnershi­p will strengthen ties between the UK and China, particular­ly in economic and trade terms.

“China benefits from the deal by receiving additional internatio­nal financial market support as the yuan internatio­nalizes and its capital markets become more open. This transactio­n could help provide new interconne­ctions for stocks, bonds, indices and other financial products, which could be important channels to support China’s full use of global financial infrastruc­ture,” he said.

The offer comes at a time when Hong Kong’s financial markets have been hit hard by the city’s ongoing riots. The Hang Seng Index started to plunge from early July and kept falling till mid-August. It has climbed slowly since then and stood at 27,159 points on Wednesday.

Hong Kong Chief Executive Carrie Lam said on Tuesday that Hong Kong’s financial markets and banking system have operated as normal in the past few months, and that Hong Kong’s core competence had not been influenced by the recent events.

Li Xiaobing, an expert on Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan affairs at Nankai University in Tianjin, said that cooperatin­g with the UK could be a “successful landing” for China in Europe that would open further cooperatio­n opportunit­ies in areas like 5G and artificial intelligen­ce, while pressure from the US mounts.

Mutual access easier

Experts said that the merger was based on both stock exchanges’ desire to seek “good sources” to cope with market uncertaint­ies. They also said that it would help with the openingup of the mainland capital markets, as mainland and UK investors would get better access to each other’s equity markets.

“After Brexit, the UK’s status as a global financial center will be affected as it would see decreasing transactio­ns, and the enhanced cooperatio­n between the London and Hong Kong stock exchanges will help the UK to tap into Chinese capital markets and attract more investment,” Liang Haiming, dean of the Belt and Road Institute at Hainan University, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Likewise, Chinese investors should have easier access to London-listed shares after the merger, said Zhao Xijun, vice director of the School of Finance at Renmin University of China.

“For China, the merger of HKEX and the London Stock Exchange would push forward the opening-up policy, especially in the financial sector, in which the central government deployed 11 measures to further open up to foreign investors in July,” Tian Yun, vice director of the Beijing Economic Operation Associatio­n, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

“The merger could also help the further internatio­nalization of the yuan and the further opening of China’s financial market,” Tian noted.

Dong Shaopeng, a veteran analyst close to the China Securities Regulatory Commission, also said that mergers and acquisitio­ns are a global trend to increase competitiv­eness and lower transactio­n costs.

“For China, the merger of HKEX and the London Stock Exchange would push forward the opening-up policy, especially in the financial sector.”

Tian Yun

Vice director of the Beijing Economic Operation Associatio­n

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 ?? File photo: VCG ?? Pedestrian­s pass by the office of HKEX in Hong Kong.
File photo: VCG Pedestrian­s pass by the office of HKEX in Hong Kong.
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