Bangkok Post

Merger of exchanges in jeopardy

LSE rejects EC’s antitrust demand

- HUW JONES JOHN O’DONNELL ANDREAS KRÖNER

LONDON/FRANKFURT: The London Stock Exchange has all but ended a planned merger with Deutsche Boerse to create Europe’s biggest stock exchange by ruling out a European antitrust demand, saying it has strong prospects alone.

In a bid to create a European trading powerhouse that would better compete against US rivals making inroads on their home turf, the two exchanges struck a €29 billion ($30.1 billion) deal just over a year ago.

If the merger fails, it will be the latest in a series of doomed efforts at dealmaking by stock exchanges and the likely breakdown of the latest attempt disappoint­ed investors, with shares in Deutsche Boerse tumbling more than 4% in early trading and London Stock Exchange shares down 3%.

In a highly unusual step, the LSE on Sunday preempted a European Commission antitrust decision, saying it was unlikely to give clearance for the merger after the London bourse had refused to sell an electronic trading platform in Italy.

A deal would now only be possible if the commission, which declined to comment, were to change its demands — an outcome that is unlikely given its approach in other mergers.

There had already been four attempts, two public and two informal, to combine the London and Frankfurt bourses during the past decade, while the European Union (EU) blocked a $17 billion tie-up between what was then NYSE Euronext and Deutsche Boerse in 2012.

However, while hopes had been high that the plan to create what the head of Deutsche Boerse dubbed a financial bridge between continenta­l Europe and Britain, this had been called into question by Brexit, with German politician­s demanding Frankfurt not London be the headquarte­rs of the group because Britain would be leaving the trading bloc.

The question over where the headquarte­rs should be, which would have arisen had EU authoritie­s given the deal a green light, worried LSE executives, two people familiar with the matter said.

Britain’s departure from the EU may isolate London as Europe’s financial centre and that had turned the tables in favour of Frankfurt.

But a source close to LSE described the sale of fixed-income trading platform MTS as a key problem because such a move was firmly opposed by Rome.

“MTS has the largest chunk of Italian government bonds which made the Italian authoritie­s wary of a change of ownership.”

Deutsche Boerse said that decision not to sell MTS had been made by the LSE, adding that it expected a decision by the Commission by the end of the month.

The LSE had said in a statement late on Sunday that the commission had asked it to sell its 60% stake in MTS to satisfy antitrust concerns over the merger of Europe’s two largest market operators.

Calling the request “disproport­ionate,” the British exchange said it believed that it would struggle to sell MTS and that such a sale would be detrimenta­l to its business.

“Based on the commission’s current position, LSE believes that the commission is unlikely to provide clearance for the merger,” it said.

The exchanges had already agreed to sell part of LSE’s clearing business, LCH SA, in order to satisfy antitrust requiremen­ts.

LSE said the commission had also raised concerns this month about the impact on the European market landscape of access to bond and repo trading feeds were the two exchanges to merge.

The exchange said it had offered certain proposals to address this but that the commission had requested it sell all of MTS instead.

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