London Stock Exchange says Refinitiv costs and savings on track
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[August 05, 2022] By
Huw Jones
LONDON (Reuters) -London Stock Exchange
Group's (LSEG) cost and savings targets for integration of data company
Refinitiv are on track, it said after half-year results and the launch
of a larger than expected 750 million pound ($911 million) share
buyback.
Investors are closely monitoring the integration of Refinitiv, which
LSEG bought for $27 billion in 2021, after outages and concerns among
some of them over the amount of money being spent to mesh two different
cultures and systems.
"We are managing costs well and we continue to make progress on
achievement of synergies," LSEG Chief Executive David Schwimmer said in
the company's half-year results statement.
Shares in LSEG were up 2.5% by 0830 GMT.
LSEG's Refinitiv purchase has transformed the 300-year-old London
exchange into a group for which financial market data and analytics are
larger than all its other business lines combined, pitting it against
the likes of data leader Bloomberg and S&P Global.
The integration has involved internal personnel changes, including
LSEG's head of data, Andrea Remyn Stone, stepping down in June after
only a year in the job, with her role temporarily taken over by
Schwimmer.
"We are successfully executing on our strategy, have good momentum going
into the second half and our targets remain unchanged," Schwimmer said.
There was a sharp drop in London Stock Exchange listings in the first
half, owing to economic uncertainty caused by the war in Ukraine, but
Schwimmer said there was a "healthy pipeline" of IPOs waiting for
markets to settle down.
INCOME GROWTH
LSEG reported a gross profit of 3.231 billion pounds, slightly above an
analysts' consensus of 3.229 billion pounds. Adjusted basic earnings per
share were 167.4 pence, above the 149.6 pence expected by analysts.
"We generate a lot of cash," Schwimmer said.
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The London Stock Exchange Group offices are seen in the City of
London, Britain, December 29, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville/File
Photo/File Photo
LSEG reported strong income growth across all divisions, with pro-forma total
income, excluding recoveries, up 6.2% on the same period last year.
"A small beat and we are reassured by the unchanged cost outlook commentary,"
Citi analysts said in a note.
Wealth Club said that modernisation of Refinitiv’s legacy technology will be a
multi-year process.
"However, If LSE can pull off the integration, investors could be richly
rewarded," said Charlie Huggins, head of equities at the research provider to
high net worth investors.
LSEG will pay an interim dividend of 31.7 pence per share, up 27% on the same
period last year.
The share buyback, which broker Jefferies said was larger than expected and part
of a "reassuring update", will be launched immediately and be conducted over 12
months.
Britain last month set out further reforms to attract more global investors to
its capital market after being largely locked out of the European Union since
Brexit.
"I don't see any one change or any one shift as the silver bullet," Schwimmer
said.
"All of the different initiatives are incrementally helpful in terms of
continuing to make London and the UK the most attractive international financial
centre in the world."
Thomson Reuters, which owns Reuters News, has a minority shareholding in LSEG.
($1 = 0.8236 pounds)
(Reporting by Huw JonesEditing by Alexander Smith and David Goodman)
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