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redred
02-09-2011, 08:07 AM
LSE agrees merger with Canada's TMX
The merged group will be co-headquartered in London and Toronto and will become the world's largest exchange for mining companies.

More than 6,700 companies will be listed on the combined exchanges, with a market capitalisation of about £3.7 trillion ($5.9tn), the firms said.

Shares in the LSE climbed by 10% in early Wednesday trading.

A number of leading exchanges have merged in recent years.

The New York Stock Exchange has bought Euronext, while Deutsche Borse has taken over the International Securities Exchange in the US. The LSE, which has successfully fought off a number of takeover approaches, has itself bought Borsa Italiana.

'Deep expertise'
The LSE's chief executive Xavier Rolet, who will head the new enlarged business said it was "an incredibly exciting merger with considerable growth opportunities".

"We are creating the world's largest listings venue for the commodities, energy and natural resources sectors, as well as the premium market for small, mid-size and growth companies."
"We are creating an international group with deep expertise, undeniable leadership in key sectors and the ability to compete and win on the global stage," Mr Kloet said.

"Canadian customers will benefit from access to one of the world's deepest capital pools while European issuers will have an effective gateway to North American financial markets."

'Interesting'
"These are arguably two of the most important mining exchanges in the world," Douglas Porter at BMO Capital Markets told the BBC World Service.

"Of course some of the world's biggest mining companies are on the LSE, and some of the world's biggest gold companies, and hundreds if not thousands of smaller mining companies are in the TMX Group.

"So certainly it brings together some of the most important mining groups in the world under one broad umbrella."

As well as the Borsa Italiana, the LSE also operates MTS, a European bond market, and the Turquoise trading platform. TMX also operates the Montreal Exchange and the Boston Options Exchange, among others.

The merger was "interesting" said Justin Urquhart Stewart of Seven Investment Management, but he added there may be opportunities for the LSE to be involved in more lucrative deals.

"What this would do is take them from 10th or 11th in the international league to fifth or sixth," he told the BBC.

"It'll allow them to have greater pools of liquidity and develop derivatives, but it's not the big story. The big story would be a potential linkage with one of the Indian markets, or potentially Singapore or maybe China.

"That's where they will get into a much larger scale operation. As yet we don't know anything, but watch India over the next few months."


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-12400785

Deepsepia
02-09-2011, 08:09 AM
LSE agrees merger with Canada's TMX
The merged group will be co-headquartered in London and Toronto and will become the world's largest exchange for mining companies.

"co-headquartered"?

Sounds complicated. UK law and Canadian law aren't the same on corporate stuff. Lawyers will do well.

Godfather
02-09-2011, 08:19 AM
:lol: Welcome to the forum Deep :P

Noilly Pratt
02-14-2011, 06:13 AM
Interesting that Britain bought up the Italian market (Borsa Italiana) in 2007 and that many of the British Market's major shareholders are in Dubai... There are no countries, just corporations.

Deepsepia
02-14-2011, 10:41 AM
Interesting that Britain bought up the Italian market (Borsa Italiana) in 2007 and that many of the British Market's major shareholders are in Dubai... There are no countries, just corporations.

Except when they need to be bailed out . . .

Arkady Renko
02-14-2011, 12:07 PM
This will be dwarfed by the prospective merger of NYSE and Deutsche Börse. I already read a few comments from wall street people who went ballistic because NYSE will only hold 40+ percent of the shares.