US listings to bounce back in 2017

A Wall Street street sign outside the New York Stock Exchange. AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File

A Wall Street street sign outside the New York Stock Exchange. AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File

Published Dec 15, 2016

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The US IPO market is expected to bounce back next year

after a forgettable 2016, fuelled by a sunnier economic outlook and a bit more

certainty following the presidential election - factors that encouraged the

Federal Reserve to hike interest rates.

The Fed lifted interest rates by 25 basis points on

Wednesday, the second increase since the financial crisis.

It also signalled a faster pace of rate hikes in 2017 as

the Trump administration takes over with promises to boost growth through tax

cuts, spending and deregulation.

Public listings will also get a boost next year from

private equity firms looking to exit their investments, executives at both the

Nasdaq and the New York Stock Exchange told Reuters.

The star-studded potential pipeline of companies set to

make their debuts in 2017 includes messaging app Snapchat's parent Snap and

ride-hailing company Uber Technologies - both "decacorns", or

companies valued at tens of billions of dollars.

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"We are going to see more companies go public now

that we are through with the elections," said John Tuttle, the global head

of listings at NYSE.

"We have a clear picture of what the next four years

will look like from a regulatory and policy standpoint. And companies like

certainty."

IPOs in the United States in 2016 fell by more than a

third from 2015. A quarter of the 102 companies that made their debuts this

year are trading below their IPO price, according to Renaissance Capital, a

manager of IPO-focused exchange traded funds.

Joseph Brantuk, vice president and head of new listings

and IPOs for Nasdaq, said there were currently 96 active applications for

public listings in the United States in 2017. Of these, 53 could be listed on

the Nasdaq.

Heavy weights

The US IPO market in 2016 is on track for its worst year

since the financial crisis in 2009, when just 56 companies listed their shares.

Apart from uncertainty surrounding the US presidential

elections, investors this year were also sceptical of the Fed's rate hike path

mainly because policymakers signalled four raises but held back until their

last meeting of the year.

"Higher interest rates may induce some private

equity firms to take buyout-backed companies public," said Jay Ritter, an

IPO expert and a professor at the University of Florida.

Higher interest rates make debt more expensive than

equity as a funding source for companies to expand their business.

Also, several private equity firms are nearing their exit

period after holding on to their investments for five to six years.

Venice, California-based Snap could go public as soon as

March and is expected to be valued at $20-$25 billion.

Read also:  Brait seeks London listing

A listing by the company, which is backed by Sequoia Capital

and T. Rowe Price, would be the largest US technology IPO since Facebook’s debut

in 2012 with a value of $81.2 billion.

Investors also widely expect Uber to file for an IPO in

2017. The company was valued at about $63 billion after its latest round of

funding in June.

A public debut by music streaming service Spotify, one of

Europe's most valuable tech start-ups, would be a boon for Europe where tech

firms tend to sell early, getting swallowed up by bigger fish in Silicon Valley

or China.

Based on active IPO applications, Brantuk said

technology, healthcare and financial sectors look the most active.

"We have never been busier."

REUTERS

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