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Euromoney, August 30 2016

When Boon Chye Loh, best-known as the driving force behind Deutsche Bank’s once-formidable global markets business for Asia, took on the top job at the SGX, he faced a challenge.

Singapore’s stock exchange can no longer count on an onslaught of new listings to drive revenues. Almost all the big blue-chips are already listed.

Foreign stocks, most notoriously the so-called S-chips that list mainland Chinese businesses of variable merit in Singapore, have fallen out of favour among local investors.

The Reits market, a Singapore mainstay, is hampered by the fact that almost all the good commercial real estate in Singapore is already securitized.

And a hoped-for generation of entrepreneur-driven local companies has largely failed to materialize – and where it has arrived, such as in tech, those entrepreneurs tend to find Nasdaq just as appealing a prospect as the SGX.

In fact, if anything, the trend is not towards new listings but delisting of existing ones.

On top of that, the natural answer to that quandary – buy foreign stock exchanges and consolidate – has been proven to be prohibitively difficult, by the SGX itself. In late 2010, the then-CEO Magnus Bocker, a veteran of no less than nine international exchange combinations at the time, launched a bid for the Australian Stock Exchange. People warned that, no matter how good the synergies might look, Australian protectionism would nix the deal, and so it proved: Bocker’s vision of regional consolidation was much more difficult to realize in Asia than in Europe, or even across the Atlantic.

So what to do? The SGX’s bid for Baltic Exchange, a deal whose terms were formally agreed on August 22, gives us an answer – and it’s a not dissimilar answer to one reached by the rival Hong Kong stock exchange. If you can’t grow through stocks, try another asset class.

Full article: http://www.euromoney.com/Article/3581746/BackIssue/96742/Asia-SGXs-Baltic-Exchange-bid-seeks-a-new-path-to-growthr.

Chris Wright
Chris Wright
Chris is a journalist specialising in business and financial journalism across Asia, Australia and the Middle East. He is Asia editor for Euromoney magazine and has written for publications including the Financial Times, Institutional Investor, Forbes, Asiamoney, the Australian Financial Review, Discovery Channel Magazine, Qantas: The Australian Way and BRW. He is the author of No More Worlds to Conquer, published by HarperCollins.

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