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Blow to City as Initial Public Offerings at new low
Blow to City as Initial Public Offerings at new low

Daily Mail​

time29-06-2025

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Blow to City as Initial Public Offerings at new low

Britain's stock market has suffered its worst first half of the year in decades, figures show. Analysis by data provider Dealogic reveals that stock market debuts have raised just £150m in 2025 so far, down 78 per cent on 2024 and the lowest level on records going back to 1999. There were just five London IPOs in the period, even lower than the desultory seven a year earlier, and the lowest level since 2009 when markets were in the grip of the financial crisis. The figures will intensify disquiet over the state of the London market which has been hit by a flurry of departures to rival exchanges and takeovers by foreign predators – who have spotted bargains among the UK's undervalued stocks. Fintech Wise recently announced it is upping sticks for New York, while hopes of a blockbuster float by fast-fashion giant Shein have evaporated as it plots a Hong Kong IPO instead. Tech firm Alphawave is among the UK-listed firms being snapped up. The latest gloomy data covers a period when Donald Trump's announcement of swingeing tariffs on trading partners – on what he called 'Liberation Day' in April – battered market sentiment at at time when there was already a dearth of IPOs. The worst of Trump's tariffs have since been put on hold. But Samuel Kerr, global head of equity capital markets at Dealogic, said: 'Liberation Day was a nightmare for deal flow, with April the worst since 2011 for global deal volume.' Charles Hall, head of research at Peel Hunt, said the figures highlighted what has been 'a theme for some time'. The London Stock Exchange's woes have led to calls for measures to force British pension funds to invest more in the UK. Hall added: 'If we don't have investment from domestic investors then we can't expect to have a healthy equity market. This is fundamental to the health of our economy.' Simon French, chief economist at Panmure Liberum, said the Government 'should promote an equity ownership culture' drawing on the legacy of 1980s privatisation campaigns. Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, said the dearth of IPOs in the first half was not unique to London, with other global markets also struggling. The figures come days after it emerged that, in a rare boost for the City, Norwegian software firm Visma is planning a £16billion London IPO – partly encouraged by reforms to the UK's listings regime. Changes have been encouraged by a City task force set up to try to revive London's market. But LSE boss Julia Hoggett, who is spearheading the campaign, admitted in a speech last week: 'We still have not seen the real turning point in terms of risk capital within and into the UK.'

Tech billionaire set for $237 million windfall from semiconductor takeover
Tech billionaire set for $237 million windfall from semiconductor takeover

Yahoo

time24-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Tech billionaire set for $237 million windfall from semiconductor takeover

Weili Dai is in line for a $237 million windfall from Alphawave's sale to Qualcomm. Dai is Alphawave's interim executive director and holds a big stake in the London-listed company. Bloomberg estimated the deal would boost her net worth to about $3.3 billion. Tech billionaire Weili Dai is in line for a $237 million windfall following a takeover deal for a London-listed semiconductor firm. Dai is the second-largest shareholder of Alphawave IP Group with a stake of about 96 million shares, Bloomberg reported. Earlier this month Qualcomm agreed to buy the company for almost $2.4 billion in a deal due to close next year. Bloomberg estimated Dai's net worth will be about $3.3 billion following the Qualcomm takeover. The Nasdaq-listed company is worth $166 billion. Forbes estimated Dai's wealth at about $1 billion in 2019. Dai and Alphawave did not respond to requests for comment. Shares in Alphawave have risen 18% in the past month and 89% since the start of the year, valuing it at about $1.8 billion. The Toronto-headquartered company had been worth considerably more following its London IPO in 2021. Dai's late husband, Sehat Sutardja, was executive director of Alphawave until his death in September last year. She had been an alternate director for Sutardja and became interim executive director following his death, as well as inheriting his stake. Dai and Sutardja were cofounders of Marvell Technology in 1995, and she was president and director of the semiconductor company until 2016. In 2018, Dai cofounded MeetKai, an AI-enabled personalized conversational search company, and remains its executive chair. She also holds board roles at Lark Health and Astrana Health. Shanghai-born Dai has a degree in computer science from the University of California, Berkeley and was previously a semi-professional basketball player in China before moving to the US with her parents. Read the original article on Business Insider

Tech entrepreneur set for $237 million windfall from semiconductor takeover
Tech entrepreneur set for $237 million windfall from semiconductor takeover

Business Insider

time24-06-2025

  • Business
  • Business Insider

Tech entrepreneur set for $237 million windfall from semiconductor takeover

Weili Dai is in line for a $237 million windfall from Alphawave's sale to Qualcomm. Dai is Alphawave's interim executive director and holds a big stake in the London-listed company. Bloomberg estimated the deal would boost her net worth to about $3.3 billion. Dai is the second-largest shareholder of Alphawave IP Group with a stake of about 96 million shares, Bloomberg reported. Earlier this month Qualcomm agreed to buy the company for almost $2.4 billion in a deal due to close next year. Bloomberg estimated Dai's net worth will be about $3.3 billion following the Qualcomm takeover. The Nasdaq-listed company is worth $166 billion. Forbes estimated Dai's wealth at about $1 billion in 2019. Dai and Alphawave did not respond to requests for comment. Shares in Alphawave have risen 18% in the past month and 89% since the start of the year, valuing it at about $1.8 billion. The Toronto-headquartered company had been worth considerably more following its London IPO in 2021. Dai's late husband, Sehat Sutardja, was executive director of Alphawave until his death in September last year. She had been an alternate director for Sutardja and became interim executive director following his death, as well as inheriting his stake. Dai and Sutardja were cofounders of Marvell Technology in 1995, and she was president and director of the semiconductor company until 2016. In 2018, Dai cofounded MeetKai, an AI-enabled personalized conversational search company, and remains its executive chair. She also holds board roles at Lark Health and Astrana Health.

Tech entrepreneur set for $237 million windfall from semiconductor takeover
Tech entrepreneur set for $237 million windfall from semiconductor takeover

Business Insider

time24-06-2025

  • Business
  • Business Insider

Tech entrepreneur set for $237 million windfall from semiconductor takeover

Tech billionaire Weili Dai is in line for a $237 million windfall following a takeover deal for a London-listed semiconductor firm. Dai is the second-largest shareholder of Alphawave IP Group with a stake of about 96 million shares, Bloomberg reported. Earlier this month Qualcomm agreed to buy the company for almost $2.4 billion in a deal due to close next year. Bloomberg estimated Dai's net worth will be about $3.3 billion following the Qualcomm takeover. The Nasdaq-listed company is worth $166 billion. Forbes estimated Dai's wealth at about $1 billion in 2019. Dai and Alphawave did not respond to requests for comment. Shares in Alphawave have risen 18% in the past month and 89% since the start of the year, valuing it at about $1.8 billion. The Toronto-headquartered company had been worth considerably more following its London IPO in 2021. Dai's late husband, Sehat Sutardja, was executive director of Alphawave until his death in September last year. She had been an alternate director for Sutardja and became interim executive director following his death, as well as inheriting his stake. Dai and Sutardja were cofounders of Marvell Technology in 1995, and she was president and director of the semiconductor company until 2016. In 2018, Dai cofounded MeetKai, an AI-enabled personalized conversational search company, and remains its executive chair. She also holds board roles at Lark Health and Astrana Health. Shanghai-born Dai has a degree in computer science from the University of California, Berkeley and was previously a semi-professional basketball player in China before moving to the US with her parents.

All is not lost for Britain's stock market
All is not lost for Britain's stock market

Yahoo

time23-06-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

All is not lost for Britain's stock market

Donald Trump's 'liberation day' tariffs may have sent global stock markets into free fall but since then all seems to have been forgiven by investors – especially those who ply their trade investing in British companies. This month, America's main stock market, the S&P 500, came within 2pc of surpassing its record highs set in February, accompanied by much fanfare on Wall Street after the period of sharp turbulence. But while the US was celebrating playing catch-up after the president's tariffs onslaught, UK stock markets have been quietly steaming ahead. Steven Fine, the chief executive of City stockbroker Peel Hunt, says investors from outside the UK are starting to take note of London's markets again after the Trump tariff turmoil. He acknowledges that you might not notice the shift amid the 'relentless' wave of companies leaving UK stock markets for the deeper pockets of US investors, including British semiconductor company Alphawave and payments group Wise. 'We have got a bit of a lack of self-esteem here,' says Fine. 'Why do overseas markets think we're more interesting than we do?' Here are five closely watched charts to show why all is not lost for Britain's stock market. The main UK stock index, the FTSE 100, closed at a record high earlier this month and has climbed more than 8pc so far this year, vastly outperforming the S&P 500, which is up by less than 2pc over the same period. Yet this year's performance on the FTSE 100 is in stark contrast to previous years, where the City lagged European and US peers. UK equity markets have 'not been an easy hunting ground', according to Tom Peberdy, of investment manager Ninety One. He says Brexit, the pandemic and an inflation crisis had made it 'pretty tough' to be a UK-focused fund manager at the firm, which targets wealthy individuals and institutional investors. 'But it does feel like the tide is turning,' he says after years of watching outsized gains on Wall Street, primarily powered by the 'magnificent seven' group of technology giants such as Apple and Amazon. 'Investors ultimately will gravitate towards where the opportunity is.' The tide of money ebbing out of UK companies in recent years has depressed their share prices – but also made them cheaper to buy. Ninety One is positioning itself for a surge in London markets, putting it at odds with the ever-increasing flow of money out of UK businesses over the past three years. In comparison, companies on the S&P 500 have grown in value by about 32pc over that time, while the Nasdaq Composite, popular with technology investors, has gained 38pc. The FTSE 100 has gained more than 16pc since April 2022. However, Fine, of Peel Hunt, sees this as a sign of resilience during a period when investors contended with the Liz Truss mini-Budget crisis and the surge in inflation triggered by the Ukraine war. 'We seem to deal with these things,' he says. 'The resilience of the UK economy is something we don't really recognise because it's always about what's going to happen next and how bad it's going to be in the future. 'So can that buffer become a bit more of a springboard?' Fund managers at Ninety One are convinced there are a series of arguments stacking up in favour of investing in British companies. 'We do think the UK gets mischaracterised still as energy and banks,' says fund manager Anna Farmbrough, who employs a strategy aimed at investing in 'quality' companies. 'We think it is worth pointing out that capital goods is the largest sector in the UK. That is full of exceptional businesses operating in very niche industries. We really do have incredible innovation and technology being produced over here. They are often mission-critical products.' She pointed to the industrial group Spectris, which saw shares surge by 65pc this month after attracting takeover bids from US private equity firms Advent and KKR. Those bids were at an 80pc premium to its share price at the time, which Farmbrough says 'gives some reassurance around where the valuations for some of these businesses are, and that they are worth a lot more'. Aside from offering the chance to buy stocks cheaply, the comparatively low valuations of companies on London's markets also offers the opportunity for better returns. 'One thing that people don't quite appreciate is what a big component dividends are in the forward returns of your buying a stock,' says Alessandro Dicorrado, who looks after value investing strategy at Ninety One. 'If you're making an investment with a long-term return ... most of that is dividend increases.' Compared with the US S&P 500 and the Stoxx 600, the main stock market benchmark in Europe, the FTSE 100 is relatively cheap to buy. Dicorrado highlights the higher dividends and buyback yields offered by companies across the FTSE compared to the S&P 500 and the rest of the world. One of the ironies of this is that if UK companies remain cheap, they will offer greater returns as it will be cheaper for them to buy back their own stock, increasing the dividend returns and value of the stocks owned by their current shareholders. 'The cheaper a company can buy back its own stock, the more durable income compounds over time,' says Dicorrado. 'Actually, what you want is for the stocks to stay cheap but we also don't want the market to die. So let's try to find a middle ground.' Look under the bonnet and British companies are also humming along more efficiently than some of their global rivals, deploying their capital more effectively. For Farmbrough, the 'real watershed moment' for London's stock market came during the pandemic. Faced with the huge challenges of lockdown, working from home and disrupted supply chains, companies were forced to 'allocate capital much better'. This is illustrated by the improvement in return on invested capital, known as Roic, of FTSE All Share companies over the last 10 years. The metric measures how effectively a company uses the money it has invested to generate profits. Farmborough says: 'There was a real watershed moment in the pandemic particularly amongst the more commoditised industries, where they really woke up to allocating capital in a more accretive way. 'So we think this has been a structural and quite permanent change to the UK market and it has not been reflected in valuations whatsoever.' Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. 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