An Australian company is gearing up for a near-£200million London listing in a boost for the City's beleaguered stock market.

Prism Global, a financial infrastructure group, is poised to become just the second main market listing on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) this year amid fears that the Square Mile is losing its status as a key global financial centre.

The company is working with lawyers at Baker Mckenzie on a direct listing that is expected to value the business at around £195million, City sources said.

The Telegraph says the float, which is set to take place this month, represents a rare vote of confidence in the LSE, which is fighting to remain relevant after an exodus of companies to the New York stock exchange in recent months.

Building materials giant CRH became the latest firm to flee the London stock market in March, while British technology enterprise Arm has also snubbed the City for its listing.

Last week, Nikhil Rathi, head of the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), said the regulator will review London's listing rules in an effort to make the market more attractive.

Founded five years ago

Prism Global was founded in Australia in 2018 and builds market infrastructure that allows investors to split securities into separately-tradeable financial products.

The company opened a London office last year as part of a move to shift its headquarters to the UK.

It is understood Prism will seek a standard listing on the LSE's main market rather than a gold-plated premium one and the company will not raise any new capital as part of the float.

Last month, Dar Global, a Saudi real-estate business, became the first company this year to list on the LSE's main market,.

London is continuing to lag rivals significantly, with more than 30 companies listing in the US between January and March and 70 in China, according to data from EY.

Separately, mergers and acquisition activity involving UK companies has slumped to a decade-low, according to new data from Refinitiv.

M&As down

During the first quarter of 2023, M&A deals with any UK involvement totalled just £38billion - the lowest first quarter total since 2013.

A top City fund manager also warned last week that the Square Mile has become a "backwater" of global stock markets.

Nick Train, co-founder of £18billion investment firm Lindsell Train, told the Financial Times it was understandable that British pension funds have backed promising global stocks rather than UK-listed companies owing to London's "dismal capital performance".

FTSE 100

The UK's top share index, the FTSE 100, was ahead 41 points at 7,672 shortly after opening this morning, following Friday's 11-point gain.

Brent crude futures were 5.24% higher at $84.08 a barrel.

No FTSE 350 companies are due to report today.

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