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London stock market loses two more high-profile listings

UK 8 min read
Author
Daniel Black

Hello,

It’s been another difficult week for London’s stock market. Payments company Wise announced plans to move its primary listing to New York, while Cobalt Holdings scrapped plans to list in London. It follows the recent news that Shein had shelved its proposed London IPO in favour of a Hong Kong listing. 

However, our Market Trends section includes a report from Mergermarket which suggests that recent economic turmoil might be turning the tide in London’s favour.

And in other news:

  • KKR pulled the plug on its Thames Water deal
  • JPMorgan has hired HSBC’s global head of M&A
  • Bidders are weighing up lowball offers for BP’s Castrol unit

Thanks for reading, and connect with me on LinkedIn if you want to discuss how I can help with your next M&A deal.

Dealmaker profile

Before we dive into this week’s news, we’re excited to bring you more insights from the people working in M&A. 

In our first dealmaker profile, we spoke to Jaime Tejero from Evercore about breaking into investment banking. This interview provides valuable insight into the essential skills and challenges of year one.

Read the article

Deal Tracker

Our weekly roundup of all the confirmed M&A deals in the UK.

TransactionSectorsBuyerBuyer’s advisorsSeller’s advisors
01

Shell purchased TotalEnergies SE’s 12.5% stake for £446m

Energy

Shell

02

National Grid sells its US onshore renewables business, National Grid Renewables, to Brookfield

Energy

Brookfield Asset Management

03

TotalEnergies acquired 435MW of UK solar, battery projects from Low Carbon

Energy

TotalEnergies

04

UK government has sold the last of its stake in NatWest

Financial services

05

FE fundinfo acquired data solutions platform Fundipedi

Financial services

FE fundinfo

06

Silver Birch Finance acquired Tradetech

Financial services

Silver Birch Finance

07

IMI Fabi Spa acquired Elementis’ Talc business £89.2m

Healthcare/pharma

Elementis

08

Tooru acquired operating businesses of S-Ventures

Healthcare/pharma

Tooru

09

Goat Insurance acquired IGG Insurance’s full book of business

Insurance

Goat Insurance

10

Markel acquired MGA Meco Group

Insurance

Markel

11

Custodian Property acquired Merlin Properties’s £22m real estate portfolio

Real estate

Custodian Property Income REIT

12

Grafton acquired HSS Ireland for £27m

Retail

Grafton

13

Penguin Random House acquired Wonderbly from Graphite

Retail

Penguin Random House

14

Serco acquired Northrop Grumman’s MT&S for £264m

TMT

Serco Group

15

Kondor AI acquired Ora Technology

TMT

Kondor AI

16

Vodafone UK and Three UK merged into VodafoneThree

TMT

17

Palatine Private Equity acquired a majority stake in Fulfilmentcrowd

TMT

Palatine Private Equity

18

Accel-KKR acquired majority stake in CareLineLive

TMT

Accel-KKR

The rumour mill

Industry news

Salaries and bonuses

Job moves

Market trends

Reeves feels the heat

If April’s borrowing data tells us anything, it’s that Rachel Reeves is facing some serious pressure. The £20.2bn borrowing figure came in £2.3bn higher than economists from Reuters had predicted, which is frankly not the kind of start of the tax year anyone at the Treasury was hoping for. 

With her fiscal headroom down to just £9.9bn and spending pressures mounting, more tax hikes are potentially coming in the Chancellor’s autumn budget. 

Go big or go home

Foreign buyers are getting pickier about UK assets, and the latest numbers from ONS prove it.  While Q1 2025 saw inward M&A values surge to £19.2bn (the highest since late 2022), the actual transaction count paints quite a different picture: just 167 deals completed, down from 189 in Q4 2024 and 179 in Q1 2024. Notable inward transactions included DS Smith’s sale to International Paper and Britvic’s acquisition of Carlsberg. 

This shift is reflected across the broader M&A landscape, where total transaction numbers fell to 395 in Q1 from 497 in Q4 2024, despite overall deal values also reaching their highest levels since Q4 2022. 

The Bank of England noted that M&A activity shows “signs of improvement, but growth is constrained by caution among buyers and sellers. Restructuring and insolvency activity remains slightly higher on a year ago.”

Rock-bottom REITs in Europe

European REITs (real estate investment trusts) have become the unexpected darling of M&A activity, and it’s easy to see why. According to Fidessa and ION Analytics insight, listed REITs are trading near decade lows while infrastructure assets elsewhere have delivered much stronger returns, creating a valuation gap that’s hard to ignore. 

The numbers back this up: 14 deals worth €7.4bn have closed in the year through May 28, making 2025 the third-highest YTD result since 2014 despite being slightly down from last year’s €9.6bn.

IPOs feeling the lure of home comforts?

Despite this week’s news about Wise’s switch to New York, Mergermarket is reporting that European firms are giving up dreams of a US-listing in favour of their home markets.

The shift is fuelled by “uncertainty over US policy and less confidence in the future of US regulation.”

It reports that Revolut and Monzo could both choose to list in London later this year. Let’s wait and see.

IPOs