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Mini-revival of London stock market listings is relief to Rachel Reeves | Nils Pratley

about 16 hours ago
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It wasn’t quite a downpour after the drought, but the weather changed for stock market listings in London during the course of 2025.The first half of the year was properly parched as President Trump’s tariff agenda upset everything: fundraisings from flotations, or initial public offerings (IPOs), were the lowest in a miserable run that started in 2022.But data from Dealogic show there was a notable pick-up in activity in the second half, albeit still billions away from that of 2021, the last strong year.The mini-revival will have come as a relief for both the London Stock Exchange and Rachel Reeves.For the former, the dearth of new listings – as opposed to fundraisings by companies already on the exchange – has become an embarrassment in recent years, especially after London failed to land Arm Holdings in 2023.

Meanwhile, the chancellor is trying to talk up the joys (and superior returns over cash) for long-term investors in equities, a task that is easier when there is a steady buzz of new arrivals.Not all of 2025’s newcomers can be described as household names.The largest IPO was the Texas-based data centre real estate group Fermi – and that was a dual listing with the US Nasdaq exchange.Better-known UK names included the £1.2bn tinned tuna maker Princes Group, which raised £400m, and the specialist lender Shawbrook.

Naturally, the LSE is keen to promote the idea that a turning point was passed,“The momentum this year is very much a sign of what is to come, with many companies actively preparing for a listing in London next year,” argues the chief executive, Julia Hoggett,She is probably correct,Share prices are high, which encourages owners to cash in a few chips,And the merry-go-round of private equity funds selling assets to each other may have reached its natural limit; the stock market, the more traditional venue for exits, looks relatively more attractive.

The most important early IPO of 2026 should be the Oslo-based Visma, one of Europe’s biggest software companies, with 17,500 employees.London first needs to be selected as the venue – Stockholm has been making a late challenge – but investment banking advisers are in place in the form of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and UBS.Visma has been backed by the UK-based private equity company Hg Capital for almost two decades.It is thought to be worth at least €20bn (£17.5bn), more than enough to enter the Footsie.

Other possibilities include the Bristol-based veterinary group IVC Evidensia, whose route is clearer now that the Competition and Markets Authority has issued its preliminary report on the sector,It operates from 2,700 sites in 19 countries, employing about 39,000 people, and the UK is its biggest single market,The company is owned by a private equity consortium led by EQT,Again, its likely valuation would make the cut for the FTSE 100,Other names include the RAC roadside recovery business (and possibly the AA too), the combined Waterstones and Barnes & Noble bookshop chains, fintech payments platform Ebury and online travel agent Loveholidays.

A market downturn would probably stall progress, but the London IPO pipeline looks in better shape than it has done for years.“We have seen confidence gradually grow with IPO issuers, who have been encouraged by the activity that has come to market,” says Brian Hanratty of the broker Peel Hunt.But London definitely needs an injection of freshness.Amid the mini-pick-upin 2025, Wise, the payments firm, announced a switch of its primary listing to the US.Meanwhile, the natural churn on takeovers and delistings continued to reduce the ranks of public companies; at the end of November, there were 930 companies with a main market listing in London, down from 972 at the start of the year.

Reeves, in her November budget, announced a three-year post-IPO stamp duty holiday for firms listing in London,That modest giveaway on the levy on share purchases is probably only a minor consideration for companies and their backers,But it would still be politically useful for her if the IPO market comes to life at the same time,An improvement is overdue – and needs to last longer than six months,The subheading of this article was amended on 2 January 2026 to remove an incorrect description of the payments firm Wise as Norwegian.

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UK children to get chickenpox vaccine with measles, mumps and rubella jab

Children in the UK are to be immunised against chickenpox at the same time as measles, mumps and rubella.The NHS across the UK’s four home nations will administer a combined vaccine to young children to protect them against all four diseases from Friday.The measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) jab, which has been used since 1988, is being replaced by a combined MMRV vaccine that includes immunisation against chickenpox, also known as varicella.Infants will be offered two doses, at 12 and 18 months, to reduce their risk of catching chickenpox. The first appointments at GP surgeries to receive the vaccine are being held on Friday

about 22 hours ago
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The reason for Italy’s ‘demographic winter’ | Letters

The Italian “demographic winter” has a number of causes, but rising male biological infertility is not one (A child is born: Italians celebrate village’s first baby in 30 years, 26 December).A lot of worry about falling sperm counts has been generated by some studies, but a more recent meta‑analysis found, through inclusion of regional controls, an increase in US sperm counts between 1970 and 2018. Sperm counts may be falling in places like the Chinese province of Henan, which has substantial air and water pollution, but there is limited evidence that sperm counts are falling in the developed world.In 2024, the Pew Research Center asked women and men over 50 who never had children why they hadn’t. Around a third (31%) didn’t want them, but more prolific reasons included “it just never happened” (39%) and “didn’t find the right partner” (33%)

1 day ago
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Two charities that received £1.1m from Sackler Trust kept anonymous to prevent ‘serious prejudice’

Two charities that received a combined total of more than £1.1m from the British charitable trust run by the Sackler family were kept out of its latest accounts to protect their reputations from “serious prejudice”.The trust, which draws on the Sackler fortune that came out of the US opioid crisis, gave £3.8m to arts, eduction and science bodies in 2024, according to its latest accounts, filed on New Year’s Eve.The largest named recipients – each receiving £250,000 – were Veterans Aid, which tackles homelessness in the ex-service community, and the Belvoir Cricket and Countryside Trust, which works to develop an appreciation for the British countryside and promotes a love of sport, especially cricket

1 day ago
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High blood pressure: who is at risk and why UK children are getting it

High blood pressure was long considered a health problem of middle age, but rates are increasing in children and adolescents, with doctors reporting a surge in strokes among people of working age.Hypertension is the medical name for high blood pressure. It arises when blood pressure in the arteries, the vessels that carry blood from the heart to the brain and around the body, is consistently above a healthy level. It is often called a silent killer because it causes damage throughout the body without producing obvious symptoms.Blood pressure is usually measured with a blood pressure monitor, which wraps an inflatable cuff around the arm

1 day ago
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Call for routine high blood pressure testing of UK children as cases almost double

Leading doctors have called for a national UK programme to monitor schoolchildren for high blood pressure amid concerns that rising rates in adolescents will increase cases of organ damage, strokes and heart attacks.Rates of high blood pressure have nearly doubled among children in the past 20 years, but no routine testing is performed in the UK, leaving doctors in the dark about the extent of the problem and which children need most help.Identifying teenagers with high blood pressure would enable GPs to intervene early and reduce the risk of organ damage and potentially life-threatening cardiovascular disease as people reach their 30s and 40s, doctors said.“We need to find out how bad the problem is, and that means finding a way to measure blood pressure in children who are still at school,” said Prof Manish Sinha, a consultant paediatric nephrologist at the Evelina London children’s hospital, Guy’s & St Thomas’s foundation hospitals NHS trust.“The fundamental issue is that people don’t recognise that hypertension can be a childhood problem

1 day ago
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UK ministers face increased pressure to restrict gambling ads

Ministers will come under mounting pressure to introduce curbs on gambling advertising this year, as MPs and campaigners latch on to polling that indicates widespread public support for tougher restrictions.Policies affecting gambling have been the subject of fierce debate over recent years, leading to stricter regulation of the £12.5bn-a-year sector and higher taxes announced in November’s budget, despite intensive lobbying by the industry.But, while successive governments have brought in measures such as lower stake limits on online slot machines and a statutory levy to fund addiction treatment, gambling advertising has remained largely unaffected.New polling, shared with the Guardian, indicates strong public backing for a much less permissive approach to gambling ads, which have exploded in volume since deregulation by Tony Blair’s Labour government in 2005

1 day ago
businessSee all
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FTSE 100 breaks 10,000 mark for first time, capping stellar year for UK market

about 13 hours ago
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Mini-revival of London stock market listings is relief to Rachel Reeves | Nils Pratley

about 16 hours ago
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UK government should end rail outsourcing ‘racket’, says union

about 16 hours ago
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UK law firms get ready for crackdown on money laundering

1 day ago
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Oil prices record steepest annual fall since Covid pandemic

1 day ago
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Wall Street ends 2025 near record highs after year of economic upheaval

2 days ago