Growing signs of trading, assets and people moving to Europe; London’s long-standing advantages may help soften Brexit. The golden age of the City of London began with a big bang. It’s ending with a whimper.
Fears that the finance powerhouse that emerged from Margaret
Thatcher’s 1986 deregulation -- known as the Big Bang -- will gradually
be dismantled have deepened with a recent flurry of announcements about
some business heading to the European Union as Britain enters the last
month of the Brexit transition period without a financial-services deal
in sight.
The latest shift came Monday at 8 a.m., when
London Stock Exchange Group Plc’s stock trading platform Turquoise Europe went live in Amsterdam. It joins other trading venues like Cboe Europe and
Aquis Exchange Plc
setting up shop on the continent as part of their no-deal Brexit plans,
a contrast with the late 1980s, which ushered in a period where London
became the place to be for equities trading.
“The City of London has been thrown to the lions,” said Alasdair Haynes, chief executive officer at Aquis, adding that the U.K. could lose even more stock trading than it expects if giant U.S. asset managers like BlackRock Inc. decide to trade in Paris and Amsterdam.
Last week, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., said it had applied to French regulators to open its SIGMA X
Europe stock platform in Paris from Jan 4. Goldman partner Elizabeth
Martin said that she expects most of the 8.6 billion euros ($10 billion)
a day in London-based European share trading to shift to the bloc.
“We are expecting a big bang on Jan. 4,” said David Howson
president of Cboe Europe, the largest of London’s stock trading
platforms, which opened its own venue in the Dutch capital last year.
“The industry has never had to move this much flow overnight.”
It’s
not just stock dealing that’s shifting. Brussels disappointed London
swap traders last week when its markets regulator said that derivatives
need to change hands on EU-based platforms from January. That means trillions of dollars of trades are at risk of being transacted outside of the U.K.
Land Grab
The
bloc has already made a land grab for London’s euro swaps clearing
business, urging its banks to accelerate a shift to Europe. Deutsche
Boerse AG’s Eurex Clearing has built up a 19% share of the business over
recent years although it is dwarfed by London’s market share....
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