Tag: London Stock Exchange
Are UK corporate governance rules leading to market malaise?
A recent article argued the UK needs “more directors who understand risk-taking, not virtue signalling” if London is to regain its status.
Dual-class shares ‘would enhance investor protection’
Allowing dual-class shares on London’s premium market would provide a “higher level of regulatory protections” for minority shareholders, says Min Yan.
Dual-class shares ‘would enhance investor protection’
Allowing dual-class shares on London’s premium market would provide a “higher level of regulatory protections” for minority shareholders, says Min Yan.
The campaign for dual-class listings in London
Stock exchanges want dual-class listings, and so do big tech companies. But not all experts are convinced of the benefits.
Board moves: London Stock Exchange Group, AB InBev and British Land
Don Robert is to become chair at the London Stock Exchange Group, while Martin Barrington and Tim Score take the boardroom reins at AB InBev and British Land respectively.
Is it time to apply governance rules to the AIM stock exchange?
The collapse of two AIM-listed companies recently have highlighted potential regulatory failings in the stock exchange, leading commentators to debate whether the market should tighten up its governance rules.
UK listings rules for sovereign companies to change
UK regulator clears the way for sovereign companies to list on the London Stock Exchange.
QCA updates smaller quoted companies’ governance code
With AIM companies having to apply a corporate governance code from September, the Quoted Companies Alliance has updated its own version.
London Stock Exchange told to tackle culture following CEO’s departure
Report calls on the London Stock Exchange to be more transparent about the company culture it wants following the controversial departure of CEO Xavier Rolet.
Activist investors: the corporate world’s new fixture
Boards beware: as investor activism becomes more prevalent, directors would do well to prepare for the worst—an issue that few companies have properly considered.