Strategy
OPINION OF THE WEEK: Fixing London's Sluggish Stock Market

Whether it is enabling entrepreneurs to efficiently exit a business (creating new HNW individuals) and allowing the public to easily win a stake in the economy, a thriving stock market is a must. While not the only stock market to be under a cloud, there appears to be a chorus of concern about London's famous market, and what to do about it.
The UK equity market is suffering from poor relative performance compared with its global peers, firms are de-listing or heading to foreign homes such as the US Nasdaq. Both major UK political parties appear to want to squeeze wealthy foreigners such as resident non-doms. However one tries to spin it, the UK isn’t sending out lots of friendly vibes for domestic or international business. (And let's not even get into the state of the country's airports.)
At a breakfast briefing in London this week with Pictet Asset
Management, your correspondent noted that while Japanese
equities (yes, really!) delivered total returns of 15.5 per cent
per annum over the past five years (MSCI, local currency terms),
the UK was less than half of that, at 6.7 per cent. Over the next
five years, Pictet has returns (in dollars) of 6.7 per cent for
the UK. The highest placed, by the way, are Swiss equities, at
11.3 per cent.
With voters due to vote on 4 July – continuing a busy year of
elections around the world – the state of the UK stock market and
“UK Plc” might not yet register as high a concern as potholes in
roads, high net migration, long health service waiting lists or
low crime clear-up rates. As I said in
a previous column, the “Overton Window” of what is
politically discussable has regrettably shifted Leftwards – more
government intervention, more tax, and more regulation. For some,
this goes counter to what Brexit was supposed to be all
about.
But because it is now outside the European Union and in an
increasingly (sadly) protectionist world, the UK needs to work
harder than ever before to prove its competitive edge. I think so
far it is coming up short.
True, there are some signs of progress. The UK Financial
Conduct Authority is considering bringing back research
“bundling” so that asset managers and other buy-side firms –
including wealth managers – could pay for research in a package
covering other services. Under the
MiFID II reforms introduced (January 2018) when the UK
was still an EU member state a few years ago, this packaging of
services
was stopped. “Unbundling” of research was designed, so the
argument went, to weed out bias, kickbacks of commissions and to
protect investors. But the culling of analyst coverage of stocks,
particularly among small and medium-sized firms, has hit stock
market activity and liquidity. It also, arguably, hit the ability
of investors to efficiently execute on some
ESG ideas. A classic case of the Law of Unintended
Consequences.
Other measures, such as the
Senior Managers Regime,
GDPR privacy regulations under the EU and tighter domestic UK
rules about
non-executive directors, can all be individually justified as
protecting market resilience and good conduct. Inevitably,
however, they collectively raise the cost to firms of doing
business. Barriers to entry become more severe. And with listed
firms having far more disclosure requirements than for unquoted
ones, it’s not surprising that more businesses are getting
snaffled up by private equity. The latter trend, one seen around
the world, explains in part why there’s so much focus on private
market investing these days. It’s where the action is.
Jeremy Hunt, UK Chancellor of the Exchequer, and his opposition
shadow, Rachel Reeves, want to play the patriotic card
by trying to fix these issues. In his March budget, Hunt
came up with the idea of launching a British ISA, or
“BRISA,” which would encourage investors to support UK-based
firms. In Reeves’ case, she wants to create a framework that will
allow insurers and pension funds to invest alongside the British
Business Bank. Another possibility is changing tax rules and
other laws to stimulate equity holdings. The specifics aren’t
clear. One idea doing the rounds on the newswires is creating a
sort of UK sovereign wealth fund, a bit like the SWFs that
operate in Norway or Singapore. The London-based think tank
Turning the Page (source, Bloomberg, 4 June) suggests
selling the state’s stake in NatWest Group and reinvesting the
proceeds in a SWF seeded with small and mid-sized UK
stocks.
Another idea from the think tank is pension tax breaks contingent
on partial allocation of fund assets to the UK. Mention of
pension funds is also a reminder that under UK accounting rules,
final-salary pensions (admittedly a dwindling group) must hedge
expected liabilities with AA-rated sterling debt. This meant
that, for the past 20-plus years, pensions have shifted
allocations from stocks to bonds. That was a nice way for the
Treasury to sell its gilts, but not so good for the equity
market.
So far, while some politicians have talked about how the City of
London financial market has a problem, there isn’t the kind of
high-volume commentary on it to suggest that it will be a big
priority for whoever is in power from 5 July. PIMFA, the UK trade
association for wealth management, possibly spoke for a lot of
wealth managers by urging the next government to focus on
removing barriers to investment rather than creating new products
like the BRISA.
“PIMFA does not consider that historic underinvestment in the UK
represents a market failure which can be addressed through the
creation of yet another ISA wrapper. In its response it suggests
the next government could stimulate UK investment further by
abolishing Stamp Duty of UK share purchases or reversing the
gradual erosion of investment allowances such as the capital
gains tax and dividend thresholds,” it said in a statement
yesterday.
“We do not believe the UK ISA represents a compelling market
opportunity for firms. Feedback from our members suggests only
marginal value can be found as an additional £5,000 annual top-up
if it corresponds with the client’s risk appetite. This would
benefit a maximum of 7 per cent of ISA savers that reached their
maximum ISA allowance in 2023/24,” PIMFA said.
Another problem with Hunt’s ISA idea is that it could fall foul
of the new Consumer Duty regime that went live at the end of July
2023, PIMFA said. The “British” ISA would have a highly
restricted universe of equities to hold – at odds with ideas
about diversification of risk and other requirements that
regulators usually insist on.
Of course, there is nothing wrong in principle in using
tax-advantaged structures, but I agree with PIMFA that it makes
more sense to lighten regulatory burdens and cut taxes than
create yet more structures – and add to the complexity of the tax
code. It is true that other countries can set rules to steer
capital into domestic markets, as Singapore has done with revised
family office regulations, to give one example.
One suspects that, given the state of public finances and the
political convictions of Reeves – who on current opinion polls
seems most likely to be the next finance minister – we are
unlikely to see PIMFA’s wish list on tax cuts come to pass.
(Well, you never can say never, I guess). But radical action of
some kind will be needed to put fizz back into the City.