Saturday, July 25, 2009

London's AIM - IPO Activity - H1 2009

Highlights
  • Unsurprisingly, London Stock Exchange AIM IPO activity has been virtually non-existent
  • However, ‘channel checks’ indicate a small pipeline of IPOs on London AIM is building
  • Unavailable, or frozen, banking facilities seen as driving SMEs towards London AIM IPO equity financing
    • Swapping debt for London AIM-listed equity to deleverage; reducing risk and interest expense
    • Raising cash on London's AIM for growth, both domestically and internationally
    • Obtaining London AIM-listed shares to affect acquisitions of weak competitors
  • 60% of London Stock Exchange AIM IPOs since 2008 raise between £5m and £100m
  • Majority of funds raised on London's AIM in 2008 (57%) for ‘operating companies’ listed on London's AIM, first year since 2005
  • Substantial decrease in London AIM IPO dilution of existing shareholders of ‘operating companies’
     2005 – 35%                 2006 – 32%                 2007 – 34%                 2008 – 25% 
  • Minimum opening market cap. upon listing on London's AIM seen as shifting up to £50m, larger for non-UK companies
  • Outlook:  H2 2009 London Stock Exchange AIM IPOs, very tepid activity post summer with a strong flight to quality

After a five month hiatus dating back to December 2008, two companies listed on the London Stock Exchange's AIM during the final two months of the first half of 2009, however, both were anomalies.  One was a ‘vulture’ property fund listing on London's AIM that raised £220 million and the other was a small specialty finance company listing on London's AIM that raised £2 million.

Feedback gathered from meetings during the month of June in London with securities lawyers, accountants, London AIM Nominated Advisers (Nomads), London AIM Nominated Brokers, financial PR/IR firms, independent equity research firms service London's AIM and the London Stock Exchange’s AIM Team indicate that a small pipeline of IPOs on the London Stock Exchange's AIM is building.  The common comment was that there “appear to be small signs of life over the last 6 – 8 weeks and, while the summer will be quiet, there is a bit of a backlog waiting to be fulfilled for listings on London's AIM”.  SMEs are being driven towards equity financing on London's AIM given the fragile state of the banking system.  Funding is not available for companies that simply need cash for survival but rather for those that are profitable and generating cash (or are very close) and want to recapitalize their balance sheets to reduce risk and interest expense, raise additional cash on the London Stock Exchange's AIM for domestic and/or international growth and, perhaps most strategically important, use London AIM-listed shares as a currency to acquire weak competitors that have valuable intellectual property (IP), customer lists and human capital.  Companies in this position view the current economic climate as an opportunity to accelerate growth and supercharge profitability by listing and raising capital on London's AIM coming out of the recession.


All Companies
Number of
London AIM IPOs
Gross Funds Raised
(in £ millions)
Average Funds Raised
(in £ millions)
H1 2008
31
  830
  27
H2 2008
  7
    88
  13
H1 2009
  2
  222
111
Total
40
1,140
  29

Exclusive of SPACs and Investment and Real Estate Funds:


‘Operating Companies’
Number of
London AIM IPOs
Gross Funds Raised
(in £ millions)
Average Funds Raised
(in £ millions)
H1 2008
 22
455
  21
H2 2008
  5
  68
  14
H1 2009
  -
   -
N/A
Total
27
523
  19

During 2008, 71% of the IPOs on London's AIM were for ‘operating companies’ and, for the first time since 2005, they captured a majority (57%) of the gross funds raised on London's AIM.  As mentioned above, the first half of 2009 is viewed as an anomaly.

Since 2008, 60% of IPOs on the London Stock Exchange's AIM raised between £5 and £100 million.
 

One interesting shift in the market that occurred during 2008 is the substantial decrease in London AIM IPO dilution of existing shareholders (see chart below).  There are two main reasons for this shift.  First, the London Stock Exchange codified the London AIM Nominated Advisers (Nomads) Rules in early 2007 which has increased the scrutiny of prospective new entrants by Nominated Advisers (Nomads) since the Nominated Adviser (Nomad) vouches to the London Stock Exchange (LSE) as to a company’s suitability for listing on London's AIM.  Second, London Stock Exchange AIM investors have become more risk adverse in the current economic climate.  Consequently, the quality of the companies listing on London's AIM has increased and, as a result, the London AIM IPO dilution of existing shareholders has decreased. 
 

The outlook for the second half of 2009 is for very tepid IPO activity on the London Stock Exchange's AIM post summer with a strong flight to quality.  It is believed that the London's AIM will continue its shift back, which started in 2008, to its original purpose of funding growth-oriented SMEs via London AIM IPOs in contrast to the proliferation of ‘investment vehicles’ listing on London's AIM during 2006 and 2007.

The London AIM of the future will look different than the London AIM of the past.  Minimum opening market capitalizations upon listing on London's AIM are seen as shifting up to £50 million for UK companies listing on the London Stock Exchange's AIM and slightly higher for non-UK companies listing on London's AIM to compensate for the perceived increase in risk.