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Euronext’s CEO Sees Diminished Role for London After Brexit

Euronext’s CEO Sees Diminished Role for London After Brexit

(Bloomberg) -- The U.K.’s decision to leave the European Union is likely to diminish London’s role as a global financial center and may create opportunities for Euronext NV to win Chinese business, said Chief Executive Officer Stephane Boujnah.

“Post-Brexit, there is more uncertainty about the future of relationships between the U.K. and continental Europe,” Boujnah said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Thursday. Chinese investors “are weighing their options about what is, going forward, the right gateway for the European market, the continental European market.”

The City of London’s role in global markets is being tested as executives and officials in the bloc try to expand their own financial centers. French and German leaders have also taken aim at London’s role in clearing euro derivatives. Boujnah said Brexit has opened a “Pandora’s box” and that Paris could very well be the new home for clearing operations.

Euronext’s CEO Sees Diminished Role for London After Brexit

Euronext, which operates stock exchanges in Paris and Amsterdam, is working on index, technology and investor-services projects with the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, the CEO said. The market operator is also arranging for European-listed companies to meet Chinese investors in Beijing next week.

“It’s extremely likely that the relationship between the U.K. and the single market will not be as deep as it used to be,” Boujnah said.

Euronext faces a threat from the planned merger between Deutsche Boerse AG and London Stock Exchange Group Plc, which would create a dominant player in everything from clearing to stock markets and indexes.

European Union competition authorities are looking into the deal and are expected to open an expanded probe into the transaction ahead of a Sept. 28 deadline. Boujnah said Euronext, which doesn’t own a clearinghouse, would consider buying some parts of the companies if regulators force them to sell assets.

“I am joining various stakeholders who have voiced already, for many months, their concerns that there is a risk of competitive antitrust issues,” he said. “If some clearing assets are for sale, we’ll consider them, but obviously not at any price.”

--With assistance from Haidi Lun To contact the reporters on this story: John Detrixhe in London at jdetrixhe1@bloomberg.net, Eduard Gismatullin in Hong Kong at egismatullin@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Trista Kelley at tkelley2@bloomberg.net, Will Hadfield