In twenty years, exchanges have gone from clubby firms to huge conglomerates
They control everything from the software powering back offices to the data pored over by investors
THE HONG KONG Stock Exchange (HKEX) resembles a financial estuary, says Charles Li, its boss. China’s capital flows mix with the open seas of global markets. In 2014 HKEX sought to ride the waves by launching Stock Connect, a conduit allowing offshore and mainland punters to invest in each other’s markets. Later it eased its listing rules for firms with dual share classes. All that has helped make HKEX more hospitable to the tech firms that exchanges covet. It has just landed another big catch. On August 25th Ant Group, the fintech affiliate of Alibaba, a Chinese e-commerce giant, filed for a listing that may raise $30bn in Hong Kong and Shanghai (see article). That would make it the largest initial public offering ever.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Big fish”
Finance & economics August 29th 2020
- In twenty years, exchanges have gone from clubby firms to huge conglomerates
- Phil Hogan, Europe’s trade commissioner, resigns
- Ant Group IPO filing shows its might
- The explosion at Beirut’s port will blow a hole in insurers’ balance-sheets
- Nicolai Tangen pays a big price for his new gig
- Efforts to rein in house prices are fuelling discontent in Seoul
- For fixed-income investors, hell is other bondholders
- Psychological scars of downturns could depress growth for decades
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