News

Cobalt Holdings plc, a company created primarily to purchase and hold physical cobalt, announced on Monday an intention to float on the London Stock Exchange, with commodity miner and trader ...
London Stock Exchange Group has suffered a rebellion over pay. At the company’s AGM, 30 per cent of shareholders voted against plans to raise the pay of chief executive David Schwimmer from £5 ...
The London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) has expanded its use of Amazon Web Services (AWS). LSEG is building on its existing multi-year agreement with the cloud provider and has named AWS the preferred ...
Hurray! All the signs are that 2025 could prove to be a cracking year for the UK’s struggling stock markets. Two companies have already listed on the main London Stock Exchange (LSE), while five ...
I am changing my recommendation on London Stock Exchange Group from Buy to Sell due to changing facts and underwhelming performance. Synergies between Refinitiv and FTSE Russell have not ...
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or ...
The gulf in fortunes between the London Stock Exchange and its parent LSEG is striking. The flow of setbacks for the former has not impeded the steady rise in the latter’s financial value.
Currently, the FTSE 100 giant enjoys a primary listing in London while also being traded on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Mr Nagle explained the firm's rationale, saying: "We want to ensure ...
Last month, former London Stock Exchange boss Xavier Rolet said there is a “real threat” that more UK companies will move their listings to America as trading thins out in London and grows ...
Last year marked one of the most subdued periods for the London Stock Exchange, with a significant exodus of companies not seen since the global financial crisis, according to fresh analysis.
London | The London Stock Exchange is on course for its worst year for departures since the financial crisis, as fears mount that more FTSE 100 businesses will quit the UK in favour of New York.
Britain’s stock market has become “deeply uncompetitive” and risks driving more companies to the US, the former head of the exchange has warned. Xavier Rolet, who ran the London Stock ...