London’s FTSE 100 Is About to Lose Another Big Name

A $20 billion merger in the packaging industry spells one thing for the UK stock market: the prospect of losing yet another of the top companies from its benchmark index.

(Bloomberg) — A $20 billion merger in the packaging industry spells one thing for the UK stock market: the prospect of losing yet another of the top companies from its benchmark index.

A planned tie-up between paper and packaging giant Smurfit Kappa Group Plc and WestRock Co. of the US would result in the cancellation of the Dublin-based company’s premium listing on the London Stock Exchange. That would make it ineligible for inclusion in the exchange’s benchmark FTSE 100 Index, which it has been a constituent of since 2016.

London’s recent losses include Just Eat Takeaway.com NV in 2021 after it was reclassified as a Dutch company post-merger, while last year saw the exit of mining behemoth BHP Group Plc. Building materials company CRH Plc is shifting from London to New York this month. These companies, which have moved their main listing outside the UK, have a combined market value of more than $190 billion, including Smurfit.

Aside from being a tough year for UK stocks with the FTSE’s dismal performance compared with US and continental European markets, the country’s attractiveness as a home for companies is being increasingly called into question.

“UK is seemingly not an attractive destination to raise capital due to the stark outperformance of US equities and their elevated valuations making capital raising look cheaper,” James Athey, investment director at Abrdn in London, said by phone. “It can become a self-fulfilling prophecy.”

London missed out on the hottest initial public offering of the year, with chip designer Arm Holdings Ltd. shunning its home market for a New York listing. In fact, this year is shaping up to be the slowest year for IPOs in the UK since 2009.

The low valuation of the UK stock market has hastened the exodus by encouraging foreign companies and private equity firms to buy and delist British companies. It’s also pushing UK businesses to consider listing elsewhere in hopes of securing a richer value for their shares, with gambling firm Flutter Entertainment Plc planning a secondary US listing in early 2024 and Cambridge-based biotechnology company Abcam Plc moving its primary listing from London to the US last year. Paris last year overtook London as Europe’s biggest stock market. 

And the UK’s shortage of growth-oriented stocks has pushed investor dollars into other markets.

“All of these factors should in time lead to a re-rating of the UK market, but in the short term they have been hindered by asset allocation outflows from the UK,” Simon Gergel, chief investment officer for UK equities at Allianz Global Investors, said in written comments. “But the drivers for these outflows should be abating too, as many of the risks in the last few years – Brexit, political risk, levels of UK economic growth and inflation – are much less obvious today than previously.” 

An LSE spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

While Smurfit is giving up its listing on the LSE’s premium segment, like BHP it will still be quoted on the exchange’s second-tier standard segment. That will make it ineligible for inclusion in the FTSE indexes.

The UK market watchdog has taken steps to boost initial public offerings, proposing to eliminate the distinction between the premium and standard listings and allowing founders to retain control of companies post-listing. It’s also studying changes to make secondary stock offerings easier.

–With assistance from Michael Msika, Thyagaraju Adinarayan, Julia Fioretti and Swetha Gopinath.

(Updates to add detail on UK companies moving listings.)

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