Markets Analysis: Shein IPO will do little to shake troubled London Stock Exchange’s ‘second-rate’ statusAttracting the Chinese e-commerce giant would be a major boost to London’s exchange, but far from a panacea
News UK finance minister meets with Shein boss as fashion giant mulls London listingIf Shein does decide to list on the flailing FTSE, it would likely be one of the biggest ever entries to the London exchange
Stock Take Irish companies shell out close to €3.7bn buying back their own shares in 2023Irish companies listed on the Dublin and London stock exchanges piled billions into their own shares this year, doubling the amount purchased in 2022
Banking Bank of Ireland makes further retreat from British market by axing AA deal and revising UK Post Office agreementDavy analysts said the news “should be welcomed” but the share price was down 0.6 per cent following the announcement
Markets Market Wrap: ISEQ edges higher as London Stock Exchange suffers another outage The London Stock Exchange suffered its third outage, halting trading in about 2,000 smaller shares on Tuesday
Stock Take Origin Enterprises struggles to find investors despite strong resultsThe chief executive of the agri-services group has been courting potential suitors as demand for small cap stocks declines
Stock Take Deliveroo’s tasty returns may win back lukewarm investors British online food ordering and delivery platform, like its Dutch rival Just Eat, saw share prices tank initially, but both are starting, finally, to find their feet
Companies Deliveroo to return almost €300m to investors as it upgrades full year profit outlook The British online food ordering platform recorded modest sales growth for the first half of 2023 against a challenging macroeconomic backdrop
Markets Can Jeremy Hunt’s reforms save the City of London?The British chancellor has proposed reforms to inject new life into the once mighty stock market but opinions differ as to whether they will work, or backfire badly
Stock Take British and Irish stock exchanges in peril as more companies opt for New York The British government is taking steps to encourage firms to keep their primary listings in London. When will we do the same?