Hong Kong bourse ditches $39bn bid for London Stock Exchange

HKEX says it is 'unable to engage with LSE management', which rejected the unsolicited approach

FILE PHOTO: A man walks past the London Stock Exchange Group offices in the City of London, Britain, December 29, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo
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Hong Kong's bourse on Tuesday dropped its unsolicited $39 billion (Dh143bn) bid for London Stock Exchange Group, conceding it hadn't won over LSE management for a move that could have transformed both global financial services businesses.

The surprise approach, made last month, had threatened to upend the LSE’s own $27bn plan to buy data and analytics company Refinitiv. The Hong Kong exchange had said the LSE would have to ditch the Refinitiv purchase for its offer to go ahead.

In a statement yesterday, Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing, said it still believed the combination of the two exchanges would be “strategically compelling”.

“HKEX is disappointed that it has been unable to engage with the management (of the London Stock Exchange) in realising this vision,” HKEX said.

The approach's chance of success was viewed by analysts as slim after it was emphatically rejected by the LSE only two days after HKEX went public with its interest.

Subsequent efforts by the Hong Kong exchange to engage with LSE shareholders had also met with resistance, with some investors saying the HKEX would have to raise its offer by at least 20 per cent – mostly in cash – to tempt LSE shareholders.

HKEX shares rose 2.7 per cent in early trading in Hong Kong following the news, compared with a 0.9 per cent gain for the blue-chip Hang Seng Index.

“The price tag from the Hong Kong exchange perspective was getting a bit too high, so it’s good for the shareholders that they decided to walk away,” said Hao Hong, head of research at broker Bocom International.

“HKEX will continue to try other things. Charles Li has done a lot of deals, most notably the London Metal Exchange. It may not be a stock exchange, but other related areas.”

HKEX’s approach for the LSE also struggled to win support as investors viewed the political turmoil engulfing Hong Kong and the perceptions of Beijing’s growing influence over the city as another key obstacle to any deal.

Under British takeover rules, the HKEX cannot bid again for the LSE for at least six months unless the LSE’s management agreed to an offer, another group made a bid for the London exchange operator, or other events were deemed to be a material change in the LSE’s circumstances.

“If the Refinitiv deal surprisingly fails to get approval, I think we could see HKEX come again,” said China Galaxy Securities analyst Chi Man Wong.

"The [LSE] shareholder meeting [to approve the Refinitiv purchase] has been tentatively set for November but there is no firm date. If that deal fails then HKEX will be there."


The LSE was not immediately available to comment on HKEX's announcement on Tuesday.