The UK stock market is falling behind Canada in value of listed companies, dealing yet another blow to London’s meandering equity market, which has been eclipsed by ascending exchanges like India in recent years.
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Bloomberg News
Geoffrey Morgan, Stephanie Hughes and Joe Easton
Published Oct 10, 2024 • 4 minute read
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(Bloomberg) — The UK stock market is falling behind Canada in value of listed companies, dealing yet another blow to London’s meandering equity market, which has been eclipsed by ascending exchanges like India in recent years.
Market values in Canada have surged 11% so far this year to $3.22 trillion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The value of firms on the Toronto Stock Exchange and the broader Canadian equity market is now neck and neck with the UK. The data excludes foreign depositary receipts and exchange-traded funds in both markets.
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The move took the UK to seventh place on a list of global stock markets by value, behind the US, China, Japan, Hong Kong and India, which surpassed the UK in 2021. Paris also overtook the London market in 2022, but political turmoil in France allowed the UK to reclaim its spot as the largest equity market in Europe earlier this year.
For its part, Canada’s stock market briefly surpassed the UK in September 2022, during the market chaos of former British prime minister Liz Truss’s government, but this time it looks like it could stick. The two have been moving in opposite directions over the past decade, with Canadian exchanges adding $1 trillion in aggregate market capitalization, while the UK lost nearly as much. Strategists and investors expect capital to flow into Canadian shares over UK stocks in the future.
The UK equity market’s lost ground partly stems from its heavy weighting in low-growth industries like consumer staples and pharmaceuticals. And while the bulk of the UK market is made up of global companies, the more-domestic stocks have been hit by a series of own-goals, including Brexit in 2016 and often rapid-fire leadership changes at 10 Downing Street.
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Toronto, meanwhile, is more heavily weighted toward cyclicals, which have all surged and led the benchmark S&P/TSX Composite to 29 record highs this year as the Bank of Canada led the Group of Seven economies in embarking on three rate cuts. A relatively larger weighting of high-growth tech companies, thanks in large part to Shopify Inc. and Constellation Software Inc., has helped Canada, too.
“Canada is a market that is still growing and still has opportunity and it puts a brighter spotlight on Canada as an investment opportunity,” said Philip Petursson, chief investment strategist at IGM Financial. He added that passive investing flows can also make the trend a “a self-fulfilling prophecy” for investors following world indexes.
Right now, there are 85 Canadian stocks on the MSCI World Index, amounting to a 3.2% weighting, compared with 75 stocks and a 3.6% weighting for the UK.
Of course, equity-market capitalization aside, Toronto is still a long way from overtaking London as a financial hub. London is ranked second only to New York on the Global Financial Centres Index, well ahead of Toronto, which is ranked 23rd. Moreover, 11% of the world’s assets are managed in the UK, second only to the US, according to the Investment Association.
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The London Stock Exchange declined to comment, but provided their own data suggesting the total market value of London firms exceeded that of Canada.
International Presence
The Toronto Stock Exchange has a presence in multiple foreign markets that are helping to drive its growth, Chief Executive Officer Loui Anastasopoulos said in an interview. “We probably have the most-global business development team of any other exchange,” he said. The firm has business development staff in the UK, Australia, Brazil, Israel and multiple US cities.
The strategy has helped the exchange to grow despite an historic dry spell of initial public offerings. There have been no IPOs in Canada since 2022, but the TSX brought 51 new companies to the Toronto Stock Exchange since that time by plucking them out of competing markets.
London’s reputation as a listing venue for global firms has suffered several blows in recent years. British chipmaker ARM Holdings Plc opted to go public in New York, while firms including Flutter Entertainment Plc and Indivior Plc have chosen to switch their main share listings to the US.
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Still, optimism is growing around a revival in IPOs. Fast-fashion giant Shein confidentially filed papers with UK authorities in June for a potential London IPO, according to people familiar with the matter, in what would be a huge listing.
Read: Will IPO Rush Pull London Stock Market Out of a Rut?: QuickTake
UK’s Tech Challenge
One major challenge for the UK market has been the size of its information technology sector, which occupies just a 1.0% weighting on the FTSE 100 Index.
Tech companies now occupy an 8.4% weighting in Canada, up from a paltry 2% a decade ago, to place the country ahead of the UK, but still well shy of the massive 30% weighting on the S&P 500 Index.
“It’s not like Canada has been shooting the lights out on productivity or innovation or pro-growth business climate either, but the UK has been really dreadful,” said Brian Madden, chief investment officer at First Avenue Investment Counsel, noting that Canada has posted better performance relative to the UK since Brexit.
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