Plus Markets Group Plc. -482 383-
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Eröffnet am: | 13.07.09 14:43 | von: upholm | Anzahl Beiträge: | 40 |
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Viel versprechende Pressemitteilung:
http://www.plusmarketsgroup.com/pressreleases/...guresJune09Final.pdf
Umsätze ziehen auch an, könnte bei der Veröffentlichung der nächsten Zahlen zu einer Überraschung kommen.
Zusätzlich dürfte die Einigung mit der LSE auch noch positiv nachwirken.
http://www.plusmarketsgroup.com/...amp;ISIN=GB0032654641/GBX/PLEU-exn
PLUS hat den Vorteil wesentlich effizienter und schneller aber und das ist die Hauptsache billiger eine Notiz (Handel) anzubieten zu können.
Cheers Upholm
Mr Brickles quit the LSE, where he had helped to create AIM, after a difference of opinion in 2004 and joined the nascent Plus operation, although he says that he retains cordial relations with Paternoster Square. Plus was based on the old Ofex over-the-counter market, then being refinanced. It was a quote-driven service whereby dealers agreed sales among themselves rather than relying on an electronic order book and was seen as more suited to trading in less liquid small and medium-cap stocks.
Plus’s interim trading statement for the half-year to the end of June shows a fall in revenues to £1.49 million from £1.6 million because of subdued market conditions and a £2.5 million legal bill for taking on the LSE. Plus is still loss-making, with a £5.85 million deficit.
More tellingly, Mr Brickles was able yesterday to point to figures suggesting that Plus now has more than a tenth of all trading in equities in London since it started offering all AIM stocks. Such statistics are difficult to analyse, because they include ancillary activities other than share deals, but this figure is about equal to all three other new entrants into the London market — Chi-X, Bats and Turquoise. On those figures, from Thomson Reuters, the LSE’s share of London equities has slipped below 55 per cent, although the Exchange prefers to focus on figures for pure equities trading that give it 63 per cent.
Mr Brickles said: “Plus attracted 10 per cent of all UK share trading in August as, for the first time, Plus was able to trade all AIM stocks. Obviously, it’s too early to draw long-term conclusions from that number, but it seems to endorse Plus’s comparative advantage over other exchanges and platforms in the small/mid-cap sector, which is the majority of UK-listed shares.”
Last week he raised £5 million from Amara Dhari Investments, a vehicle set up by Middle Eastern investors to take 17 per cent in Plus. This will strengthen the balance sheet, though Plus has about £10 million in the bank. He hopes that the link will steer Gulf investors towards Plus in London. In the first half, more than 36 billion shares were traded, triple the level of a year before. Market capitalisation of all Plus companies was up a third to £2.5 billion.
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/...kers/article6853046
und wieder ein schöner Tag mit 8,375 BPC + 4,69 % geschlossen und rd. 1,4 Mio Stück :-))))
http://www.plusmarketsgroup.com/pressreleases/...September09Final.pdf
Not any more.
Not only is it coming under pressure to attract flotations from the likes of other major markets, such as Wall Street, Nasdaq, Hong Kong, Frankfurt and Paris, but even those trading platforms in its own backyard are scrambling for market share.
In recent years the emergence of multiple trading platforms such as Chi-X, Nasdaq OMX and the technology driven American outfit BATS Global Markets have also begun eating into its market share. BATS is the newest kid on the block. Its single-trading platform was introduced to European markets barely a year ago, but has already established itself as a major player. Earlier this month, it announced it had achieved almost a 10% share of the London FTSE 100 market. Traders say they expect BATS to become a major player in London during the next few years.
Chi-X has also been making big inroads, which is why the LSE now accounts for less than 50% of the total turnover now being carried out in BP, the UK's biggest blue-chip company in terms of capitalisation. The number of shares the LSE trades in another oil giant Royal Dutch Shell has also plummeted.
Even the junior Plus market is making in-roads. Last week it reported that equity trading volume of more than 11 billion shares had been achieved for the first time in October, just shy of 10% of the total UK equity volume being traded on various exchanges and platforms. The growth has been driven by strong retail trading and reflects Plus's ability to trade all UK equities now, including all AIM stocks since earlier this summer.
In the meantime, the LSE has delayed the introduction of its nascent dark pool Baikal, pending the outcome of takeover talks with Turquoise, a rival multiple trading platform.
http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard-business/...on-the-pressure.do