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Singapore Exchange Weighs Smaller Deals as Mergers Implode

Singapore Exchange Eyes Smaller Deals as Bourse Mergers Implode

(Bloomberg) -- As global bourses come to terms with the failure of the latest mega-merger, Singapore Exchange Ltd. is sticking to its incremental approach.

SGX, which tried to buy ASX Ltd. in a deal rejected by the Australian government in 2011, still wants to strike deals, though another blockbuster expedition is unlikely. Instead, it’s eyeing potential acquisitions in financial technology as well as of firms that complement existing capabilities, according to its recently appointed equities head.

Singapore Exchange Weighs Smaller Deals as Mergers Implode

“It is very difficult to persuade another exchange that you want to buy them and then take up lots of costs, precisely because these are national infrastructures,” Michael Syn, who oversees both the stock and futures markets, said in a recent interview. “That is very hard to do in very regulated marketplaces.”

The softly-softly strategy may make it hard for SGX to catch up with other Asia-Pacific players, especially Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing Ltd., which has a market capitalization about six times larger than its Singapore rival. However, HKEX has lost a chance to jump even further ahead with its decision last week to abandon a 29.6 billion pound ($36.9 billion) takeover bid for London Stock Exchange Group Plc.

Singapore Exchange Weighs Smaller Deals as Mergers Implode

Recent SGX deals have included investment in companies such as BidFX and 1exchange, a platform that uses blockchain technology to record trades of private securities.

As well as scouting for suitable acquisitions, Syn said SGX is working on a number of projects that play to its strengths as a stable, higher-yielding market at a time of weakening global economic growth.

New Initiatives

Syn said he views delistings and the lack of big initial public offerings in Singapore as part of the natural market cycle, though both these factors have been seen as constraining the growth of the equity market. Just this month, Southeast Asia’s biggest property portal PropertyGuru Pte. kick-started plans to list on the Australian stock exchange, more than 10 years after being founded in Singapore.

An IPO “is not a hunting exercise,” said Syn. Most of the process is driven by the issuer and the bankers, so the job of the exchange “is to make sure that your platform is ready, that you have the right to play and the right to win when someone comes along.” He sees secondary fundraisings continuing to make up most of what SGX offers in terms of new capital formation in the next two years.

So far this year, SGX shares have gained more than 17% compared to the 1.4% gain in the city-state’s benchmark index and HKEX’s 4.7% rise.

Here are the initiatives Syn, who took on the equities role in June after leading the bourse’s derivatives business, is looking at:

  • Launching more single-stock futures, starting with Singapore shares. Though SGX hasn’t announced a date, Syn said the launch horizon for such products is typically a year or less. The SGX already offers single-stock futures on Indian equities
  • Introducing derivatives on freight capacity, meeting demand from ship owners; SGX is also looking at products that allow for the purchase of container freight places, rather like booking a hotel or a flight on Expedia
  • Setting up systems that allow retail clients to trade via social media applications such as Facebook Inc.’s WhatsApp or Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s WeChat

One area where it has put on the brakes is cryptocurrency, Syn said. SGX had looked at offering physical Bitcoin futures, along the lines of Intercontinental Exchange Inc.’s Bakkt unit. But after studying the technology, SGX couldn’t overcome concerns about becoming a Bitcoin custodian.

“We figured we could make it reasonably hackproof, but there would be contagion on the reputation if there’s a breach, regardless of insuring away the financial loss,” Syn said.

That reputation is especially important as SGX markets itself as a haven of stability in a turbulent world.

“In a negative-yield world, people will rediscover the virtues of yield assets with nominal return, and upside exposure to equity risk premium,” said Syn. “That’s not the traditional way to sell a stock market, but we expect more capital to come in and lubricate the liquidity flywheel.”

--With assistance from Zhen Hao Toh.

To contact the reporters on this story: Joanna Ossinger in Singapore at jossinger@bloomberg.net;Ishika Mookerjee in Singapore at imookerjee@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Joyce Koh at jkoh38@bloomberg.net, Marcus Wright

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.