ICE says no bid for London Stock Exchange
[NEW YORK] US-based global markets operator Intercontinental Exchange said Wednesday it had decided not to make an offer for the London Stock Exchange, which has agreed to merge with Deutsche Boerse.
"ICE determined that there was insufficient engagement to confirm the potential market and shareholder benefits of a strategic combination," the company said in a statement.
"Therefore, ICE has confirmed that it has no current intention to make an offer for LSEG."
ICE, owner of the New York Stock Exchange, had said in early March that it was considering a bid for the London Stock Exchange Group, which owns the London and Milan exchanges.
LSEG said in March that it intended to merge with Deutsche Boerse, which manages the Frankfurt stock exchange.
A tie-up between the two big European exchange operators would create one of the world's largest exchanges.
Shares in ICE jumped 6.4 per cent in morning trade on the NYSE.
LSEG tumbled 6.2 per cent on the London Stock Exchange and Deutsche Boerse added 5.6 per cent.
In a brief statement, Deutsche Boerse said it "has noted" ICE's announcement.
AFP
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Banking & Finance
UOB awards Wong Kan Seng over S$400,000 in shares
Singapore eyes giving law enforcement agencies more power to probe money laundering offences
Seventh money laundering accused to plead guilty on May 23
DBS hires chief of Ping An’s tech group to be its new chief information officer
Indian banks to step up IT spends as regulatory scrutiny rises
Swedish central bank lowers key rate, sees two more cuts this year