logo
UK markets 'drifting into irrelevance': CBI sounds alarm over decline of the LSE

UK markets 'drifting into irrelevance': CBI sounds alarm over decline of the LSE

Daily Mail​08-07-2025
London's stock market risks 'drifting into irrelevance', according to business leaders.
In a hard-hitting report, lobby group the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), calls for bold reforms to revitalise the exchange.
The proposals include the removal of stamp duty on share purchases – a 0.5 per cent tax that only applies to UK equities.
Critics say this arrangement makes it more attractive to buy overseas stocks such as Amazon instead of investing in British firms like Rolls-Royce.
Ministers are also urged by the CBI to consider encouraging pension funds to invest more in UK shares.
The London market faces a deepening crisis with many of its most prominent companies being snapped up or switching their listings to New York.
Fintech Wise is the latest to have confirmed such a move while recent reports suggested that even drugs giant AstraZeneca – Britain's biggest listed firm – may cross the pond.
The CBI's report said UK investors are 'shifting away from UK equities' while listings have slowed, private equity predators are snapping up many businesses and high-growth firms are often looking overseas to raise capital.
City grandees, government officials and regulators have been working to turn the UK's fortunes around including through changes to the listings regime.
And the report acknowledged that reforms had created 'positive momentum'.
But it added: 'If current trends continue unchecked, there is a risk of London's markets drifting into irrelevance, with fewer domestic champions and lower investor interest, leading to an inability to support home-grown high-growth companies.'
CBI chairman Rupert Soames said that while the problems facing the UK were common to other markets, London had seen a 'far greater loss of domestic liquidity than other markets as investors have allocated their assets away from UK equities and into other markets and into bonds'.
Proposed reforms include moves to reinvigorate public interest in shares, encouraging companies in Asia to have secondary listings in London, and making the cost of initial public offerings (IPOs) tax deductible.
And the report raises the idea that after the Mansion House accord – under which pension funds have agreed to invest more in private UK assets such as infrastructure – a similar move might be considered to include UK shares.
Another proposal – not put forward by the CBI but expected to be unveiled by Chancellor Rachel Reeves in her Mansion House speech next week – involves reducing the maximum level of cash that can be invested tax-free into Isas every year.
The idea is to encourage savers to plough their money into stocks and shares instead. It is backed by many in the City but opposed by building societies who rely on the cash savings to fund mortgage lending.
Soames would not be drawn on his view given the divided opinion at the CBI but made clear his wider opinion on the merits of investing in cash rather than other assets, saying it had been shown to be 'the worst possible investment'.
Soames voiced optimism about the push to revive the London market.
He said the London Stock Exchange together with regulators and the Government were 'getting their act together to try and bring life back into the LSE'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Norwich man 'demoralised' after Ryanair damages wheelchair
Norwich man 'demoralised' after Ryanair damages wheelchair

BBC News

time10 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Norwich man 'demoralised' after Ryanair damages wheelchair

A wheelchair rugby player says he feels "demoralised" after an airline refused to pay the full cost of replacing his damaged Connor-Saunders, 28, who has cerebral palsy, arrived back at London Stansted Airport on a Ryanair flight from Toulouse, France, to find his £9,000 bespoke chair bent out of Connor-Saunders, of Norwich, described Ryanair's offer of £1,500 compensation as "insulting," saying it was only a fraction of the cost of a new chair. A Ryanair spokesperson said the company had offered the maximum compensation he was entitled to. Mr Connor-Saunders, who plays for London WRC, is a personal back at Stansted last December after a tournament, he saw the back of his wheelchair - which he uses in everyday life, but not for rugby - had been said it was "demoralising" as he used the made-to-measure chair for "everything"."A wheelchair is not your generic medical kit, or it's not your generic luggage that's lost and damaged and can be easily replaced," he said. Mr Connor-Saunders, who did not have travel insurance, said the company that made it told him it could not be used a hammer to straighten out the bent frame but said it was now painful to sit in, and he thought it was likely to break soon."I'm just sitting on a ticking time bomb at the moment," he said."I can only bear to be in my chair for two to three hours at a time or I'm in pain for the rest of the day." Emails state that the airline has accepted responsibility for damaging the wheelchair and has offered him £1,500 in compensation."That wouldn't even cover the costs of two wheels, let alone replacing the chair," said Mr Connor-Saunders."This has stopped me from being able to work. I'm incapable of fronting up that extra money myself."A spokesperson from Ryanair said wheelchair handling at Toulouse Airport was provided by a separate company that it paid for."Under the Montreal Convention, the maximum compensation this passenger is entitled to is £1,500," the spokesperson added. Follow Norfolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.

Row over 'cheeky' Deepings homes plan
Row over 'cheeky' Deepings homes plan

BBC News

time10 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Row over 'cheeky' Deepings homes plan

A row has broken out over new housing in City Council (PCC) has been accused of being "cheeky" for wanting to put new homes close to its border with The Deepings in Lincolnshire.A council spokesperson said "the area's young people need new housing".However, Councillor Phil Dilks, of neighbouring South Kesteven District Council (SKDC), said it would "put more strain on infrastructure". The Deepings, which includes Deeping St James and Market Deeping, currently has 6,276 homes, according to the 2021 has allocated a further 1,800 homes in the area under its local plan, which is currently out for public has also earmarked some nearby land, just into its border, to take 1,050 houses, in its local plan, which is also being consulted on. If both plans get signed-off by the government, the total number of homes in the area would increase by 45%. Judy Stevens of Deeping St James Parish Council said residents were worried about the prospect of more housing without extra facilities such as shops and schools."People already feel let down because they have been promised increased infrastructure as a result of already existing new developments and that hasn't translated into reality," she said."They're not saying not in my backyard, but they are saying no to this many." Dilks, who represents Deeping St James on SKDC, said: "Market Deeping and Deeping St James are entirely in South Kesteven District Council. What Peterborough are looking at is a piece of land south of Market Deeping."We have made our views known to Peterborough and I think it's a bit of a cheek when clearly those people would be using the infrastructure that is already strained in The Deepings".Councillor Nick Thulbourn, cabinet member for growth and regeneration at PCC, agreed anyone buying the new houses in its area would use the public amenities over the border in he said any strain on infrastructure would be factored into the local plan when it was adopted."Peterborough is a young growing city so we need housing and we need for young people to get on with their lives," he said. Listen to highlights from Lincolnshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here. Download the BBC News app from the App Store for iPhone and iPad or Google Play for Android devices

BP to update on cost-cutting progress as Elliot increases pressure, FT reports
BP to update on cost-cutting progress as Elliot increases pressure, FT reports

Reuters

time10 minutes ago

  • Reuters

BP to update on cost-cutting progress as Elliot increases pressure, FT reports

Aug 4 (Reuters) - BP (BP.L), opens new tab will announce updates on its $5 billion cost-cutting initiative on Tuesday, amid growing pressure from activist investor Elliott Management to take stronger action to reduce its operating expenses, the Financial Times reported on Monday. Elliott wants BP CEO Murray Auchincloss to add another $5 billion of cost savings to the $4 billion-$5 billion in reductions by 2027 he announced in February from a 2023 baseline, the FT report said. Reuters could not immediately verify the report. BP and Elliott did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The hedge fund has "identified tens of thousands of BP support staff globally" as an example of the cost base, the report added. BP has already cut $750 million of costs towards its target in 2024, and is looking to reach its cost savings target through job cuts, divestment and streamlining supply chains, the FT report said. Reuters reported in April that the activist investor would like BP to cut its spending to around $12 billion a year, down from a current range of $13 billion-$15 billion, through to 2027, and deepen its cost cuts, especially on administrative expenses. Elliott, which holds a stake of little more than 5% in BP, also wants the oil major to replace its strategy chief and create separate units for upstream and downstream activities to improve accountability.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store