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Deutsche Börse-NYSE merger heads for rocks

The merger of Deutsche Börse and NYSE Euronext, which would create the world's largest market operator worth over $17 billion (€14 billion), looks seriously compromised just weeks from an EU competition decision.

Deutsche Börse-NYSE merger heads for rocks
Photo: DPA

With European anti-trust services setting conditions deemed unacceptable by executives, there is a growing chance that the tie-up putting the New York

Stock Exchange under the same roof as the German market operator will fall apart.

A senior executive of NYSE Euronext – which also operates markets in Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels and Lisbon – said it would not make additional concessions to secure approval by the European Commission.

“We won’t go any further because that threatens the business logic of the deal,” NYSE Euronext deputy chief executive Dominique Cerutti told the French business daily La Tribune on Friday.

NYSE chief executive Duncan Niederauer had already acknowledged that it appeared the European Commission was set to reject the plans come a February 9 deadline for its decision, almost one year after the deal was first announced.

But he said they had received no formal notification.

In a video message to employees, Niederauer said of the anticipated rejection: “If that’s true, I would have to say that’s a pretty disappointing conclusion.”

A person familiar with the EU review told AFP earlier in the week that the proposed merger as it stands was unacceptable.

EU competition authorities opened a probe into the deal in August over concerns that the merged company would control 90 percent of the European derivatives market.

In November the companies proposed separating some of their derivatives operations to allay EU concerns, but sources said the Commission was unsatisfied.

“It is not certain the Commission could accept” the merger in its current state, added the source.

The Commission wanted NYSE and Deutsche Börse to sell off some of their derivatives businesses to allay competition concerns, which Cerutti said was a

position “based on erroneous data.”

The proposed merger has also sparked controversy in the United States because it would hand over the New York Stock Exchange to foreign owners.

The merger would see Deutsche Börse shareholders own 60 percent of the new combined, Netherlands-incorporated firm.

The US Justice Department said in December that Deutsche Börse would have to sell its 31.5 percent stake in Direct Edge Holdings, the fourth-largest exchange operator in the United States.

AFP/smd

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STOCK MARKET

Swiss stock market opens down after Wall Street chaos

The Swiss Market Index (SMI) stood at 8,771.90 points or 3.6 percent down shortly after the opening of the day’s trading on Tuesday.

Swiss stock market opens down after Wall Street chaos
A trader in New York on Monday. Photo: Bryan R. Smith / AFP

At one point the index was down as much as 4.3 percent. However, the index then began to rally to be down 2.36% to 8,886 points at 9.25am local time.

This is the first time the SMI has been below 9,000 points since September 2017, with the biggest losers early on Tuesday being banks. Credit Suisse shares were 5.2 percent lower while UBS stocks had tumbled 4.5 percent.

The falls on the Swiss index, which includes the 20 largest companies in the country, come a day after the Down Jones Industrial Average suffered its worst points fall in history, shedding 4.6 percent on Monday on the back of investor fears of rising interest rates.

The sharp downturn in the United States wiped out all market gains seen in 2018 to date while Asian markets also took a hit last night.

Monday’s chaos on Wall Street spelled an abrupt end to the buzzing mood on economic markets since Donald Trump’s arrival in Washington – a phenomenon described by the White House as the “Trump Bump”.