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Deutsche Boerse-LSE deal in danger as EU demand rejected

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LONDON: Deutsche Boerse AG’s US$13bil bid for London Stock Exchange Group Plc headed toward collapse after the UK market operator rejected demands by European regulators to sell one of its holdings.

LSE said it couldn’t commit to sell its stake in MTS, an electronic trading platform for government bonds, and declined to submit a counter proposal after European Union officials made divesting the unit a condition for approval. Shares of Deutsche Boerse fell as much as 4.1% on Monday, while LSE dropped as much as 3.5%.

“Based on the commission’s current position, LSEG believes that the commission is unlikely to provide clearance for the merger,” LSE said in a statement on Sunday. The European Commission said it had no comment. Deutsche Boerse said it was still waiting for European regulators to make a final decision.

A failure to overcome regulators’ concerns may invite new deals involving LSE, which has been a takeover target for almost two decades yet has never consummate­d a deal of this scale. It also raises questions about its chief executive officer, Xavier Rolet, who under terms of the takeover would step down if it succeeds.

In the past year, LSE avoided a potential offer from US-based Interconti­nental Exchange Inc (ICE). Now, ICE has another opportunit­y to try to buy the London exchange company. Analysts have speculated that, should Deutsche Boerse’s takeover of LSE fail, a company like electronic market operator NEX Group could become a target for LSE.

Smaller exchange companies in Europe, meanwhile, could get some relief from the competitiv­e threat that a combined LSE, Deutsche Boerse would have posed.

The companies’ ambition was to create Europe’s dominant operator in everything from indexes to stock markets and clearing, with businesses in more than 30 countries. It would potentiall­y be the most profitable company in its industry. Some have said it could bridge financial centers at a time when politics threatens to pull them apart.

LSE said it couldn’t sell MTS, which plays an important role in trading Italian government bonds.

The two operators have been down this road before, with Deutsche Boerse previously failing in an attempt to buy LSE, whose roots going back more than 300 years. Given past failures, it’s an open question whether European exchange operators will be able to consolidat­e in a way that gives them the stature of large companies in the US and Asia.

“Never say never,” said Thomas Caldwell, chief executive officer of Caldwell Securities Ltd, a money-management firm in Toronto. “If something makes good business sense, eventually exchange executives will find a way. This was an anomalous event. You had the Brexit vote, it surprised everybody, and we’re still in the post-trauma phase.”

Previously, the only offer from the two to appease antitrust regulators had been LSE’s proposed sale of its French clearingho­use. LSE said the commission unexpected­ly brought up new concerns about the planned sale of the French unit and its relationsh­ip to MTS.

Regulators are due to rule on the takeover by April 3, but Deutsche Boerse said in a statement on Sunday that it expects a decision by the end of March.

The German state of Hesse, a vocal critic of the deal, regulates Deutsche Boerse and will review the deal if it survives EU scrutiny. State officials declined to comment yesterday.

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