Arab Times

Hong Kong bourse pulls plug on $39 bln play for LSE

London exchange had already rejected unsolicite­d approach

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HONG KONG, Oct 8, (RTRS): Hong Kong’s bourse on Tuesday scrapped its unsolicite­d $39 billion approach for London Stock Exchange Group (LSE) after failing to convince LSE management to back a move that could have transforme­d both global financial services giants.

Last month’s surprise cash-andshares approach threatened to upend the LSE’s $27 billion plan to buy data and analytics firm Refinitiv. The Hong Kong exchange had said the LSE would have to ditch the Refinitiv purchase for its offer to go ahead.

LSE shares slid 6.1% by 0805 GMT, close to their lowest since Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd (HKEX) announced its approach on Sept 11, while the Hong Kong bourse’s stock was up 2.3% near the end of its trading day.

HKEX chief executive Charles Li wrote in a blog post: “We still believe the strategic rationale for the combinatio­n of our two businesses is compelling and would create a world-leading market infrastruc­ture group.”

People chat outside the Hong Kong Exchange Square building in Central Hong Kong, on Oct 8. The Hong Kong stock exchange on Tuesday formally dropped its bid to buy its London counterpar­t after the European exchange

rejected the surprise offer. (AP)

“Despite a huge amount of work and discussion­s with a broad set of regulators and extensive shareholde­r discussion­s, the level of engagement from LSEG led us to conclude that the continued pursuit of a combinatio­n of the two businesses would not be in the best interests of our own shareholde­rs.”

The LSE did not respond to a request for comment. Refinitiv is 45%-owned by Thomson Reuters which owns Reuters News.

One LSE investor told Reuters it would have been “very, very hard to get the LSE board to engage as they rebutted the offer on grounds of strategy, not price.” The investor spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivit­y of the matter.

Analysts had viewed HKEX’s chance of success as slim after it was rejected by the LSE just two days from the HKEX going public with its interest. Political turmoil engulfing Hong Kong and perception­s of Beijing’s growing influence over the city, were seen as another key obstacle to any deal.

Subsequent efforts by HKEX officials to engage with LSE shareholde­rs had also met with resistance. Some investors told Reuters the HKEX would have to raise its offer by at least 20% – mostly in cash – to tempt LSE shareholde­rs.

“The price tag from the Hong Kong exchange perspectiv­e was getting a bit too high, so it’s good for the shareholde­rs that they decided to walk away,” said Hao Hong, head of research at broker BOCOM Internatio­nal.

Since the HKEX went public with its interest in mid-September, its shares had fallen 8%, compared with a 5% drop in the Hang Seng

The failure of the bold move leaves open the question of what Li might try next to fulfill the HKEX’s strategy of being “Chinaancho­red and globally connected”.

The HKEX has been the world’s largest capital-raising venue in five of the past 10 years, but has been working to diversify its equities focus, launching a bond trading platform with China and buying the London Metal Exchange in 2012 for 1.4 billion pounds ($2.2 billion).

“HKEX will continue to try other things. Charles Li has done a lot of deals, most notably the London Metal Exchange. It may not be a stock exchange, but other related areas,” said Bocom’s Hong.

Under British takeover rules, the HKEX had until Oct 9 to make a binding offer for LSE. The withdrawal of the approach means it cannot bid again for the LSE for at least six months unless the LSE’s management agreed to an offer, another group made a bid for the London exchange operator, or other events were deemed to be a material change in the LSE’s circumstan­ces.

“If the Refinitiv deal surprising­ly fails to get approval, I think we could see HKEX come again,” said China Galaxy Securities analyst Chi Man Wong.

“The (LSE) shareholde­r meeting (to approve the Refinitiv purchase) has been tentativel­y set for November but there is no firm date. If that deal fails then HKEX will be there.”

Analysts at Bank of America said investors had been worried that the HKEX’s pursuit of a deal could have led the exchange to raise fresh funds - weighing on the price of existing shares.

“We think there may still be questions as to why HKEX proposed the acquisitio­n when it seemed somewhat challengin­g to bring to fruition, but we believe investors will likely focus more on the fundamenta­ls of the company and the market in Hong Kong,” they said in a research note.

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