Analysis-AstraZeneca’s US listing may pull other firms from London in its wake

Analysis-AstraZeneca's US listing may pull other firms from London in its wake

By Charlie Conchie

LONDON (Reuters) -AstraZeneca’s move to upgrade its listing in the U.S. risks pulling liquidity away from London’s stock market and could pave the way for other large companies to follow suit, analysts, investors and advisers said.

The British drugmaker, one of London’s most valuable listed companies, said on Monday it would retain its listings in London and Stockholm but also plans to offer its shares directly on the New York Stock Exchange, moving away from the current depositary receipt structure, from next February.

AstraZeneca Chair Michel Demare cited the fact that U.S. shareholders represent the drugmaker’s largest single investor group while its U.S. business accounted for 43% of total revenue last year and is expected to represent 50% of revenue by 2030.

Some analysts and policymakers expressed relief after some media reports had suggested the company was considering ditching its London listing altogether. That would have been another rebuke to the UK after AstraZeneca recently paused a 200 million pound ($268.80 million) investment plan in Cambridge and earlier this year scrapped plans to invest in a vaccine manufacturing facility in Liverpool.

A UK government spokesperson said AstraZeneca’s decision that it will stay listed, headquartered and paying tax in the UK brought clarity and was positive for employment, growth and innovation. “The decision signals clear confidence in the UK economy,” the spokesperson said. “It shows British companies can scale globally, attract international investment – including from U.S. markets – and remain rooted in the UK.”

A person familiar with AstraZeneca’s plans said the company, which has a market capitalisation of $230 billion as of Monday’s close, had no current plans to scrap its London listing. Yet some people flag risks that not only could trading of AstraZeneca shares now drift towards New York, but that other large London-listed firms will be watching to see if they should follow in its wake.

“A large proportion of large UK-listed companies have a big U.S. investor base,” said Charles Hall, head of research at London investment bank Peel Hunt. “All companies look at what others do, and today this will be on the boardroom paper of a lot of other FTSE firms as they assess what the implications are.”

Around 22.5% of AstraZeneca’s shareholders are based in North America, similar to FTSE 100 companies such as HSBC, Shell, Rolls Royce, BAT and Rio Tinto, which range at 20.5-24.7%, according to LSEG data.

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