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Professional Services

London Stock Exchange sees decline as º£½ÇÊÓÆµ firms opt to remain private longer, says º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Finance report

The financial services company, which serves as an industry body for banking, found a dwindling importance of public listings with firms staying private for longer.

London Stock Exchange emblem(Image: PA)

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Finance has highlighted the evolving relationship between British businesses and public exchanges like the London Stock Exchange, calling for a new approach in light of significant changes.

The finance industry body, which represents the banking sector, observed a declining emphasis on public listings with companies remaining privately held for prolonged periods, resulting in a "shifting" of market dynamics, as reported by .

Its analysis, supported by professional services firm EY, pointed to a noticeable surge in private capital markets.

The growth rates are impressive: venture capital investments have been increasing by 20% annually on a compound basis, private equity by 11%, and private debt by an astonishing 43% since 2013.

"The decision where to join public markets is now more nuanced," the finance body noted in its publication.

One particular area of concern outlined in the report is the reduced market capitalisation of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ-listed firms, which has plummeted by 17% from 2013 levels.

Moreover, last year witnessed a sharp drop in the number of businesses on the London Stock Exchange, with 88 departures including Paddy Power parent Flutter and tech success story Darktrace, contrasted with just 18 new entrants.

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Finance document stressed the urgency for action: "A unified course of action, looking across public and private capital markets, needs to be taken now."