Stock market listings are not shrinking but they are migrating

Stock market listings are not shrinking but they are migrating

As published by Business Day on 30 January, 2023

SA Investors need to cast a wide net to take advantage of robust activity in the developing world.

Some market observers are shouting the alarm that the number of listed equities on some developed market bourses has shrunk in recent years. Amongst other things, they are concerned that a smaller pool of listed companies means concentration of power with a few mega caps, due to M&A activity and fewer investment opportunities for public investors vis-à-vis private equity investors. This is also true of the JSE, where the number of listed companies had dwindled to 300 at last count, substantially below its peak of 700.

However, they should not be so quick to shout the alarm. While the number of listed equities on some developed market bourses has shrunk, the number of listed equities globally has remained stable, close to all-time highs. For every company delisting on one exchange (either due to being taken private, acquired in a M&A deal, or going bust), another one is IPO’ing somewhere else, even though it may not be on the same exchange or within the same country.


Sources: World Bank, World Federation of Exchanges, Statista

Listing activity, especially in the developing world, has been robust so investors need to cast their nets wider than just developed markets (and certainly wider than just the JSE) if they want to access these exciting new opportunities. This is evident when looking at the increased number of listings on exchanges in the Asia Pacific region, particularly Shanghai and Shenzhen.


Sources: EY, Statista

Since the IPO of the Dutch East India Company more than 4 centuries ago, listing minority stakes on global exchanges has been the preferred method to raise capital both for growth, and for owners to monetize their shares. Listing has unwanted side effects, however. Increased regulatory scrutiny, administrative requirements, underwriting fees, and investors’ preference for short-term performance has decreased the attractiveness of offering shares to the public.

Unicorns

This downside paved the way for the rise of private equity firms, and more recently SPACs, to provide businesses with another method of raising capital without having to pursue a public listing.

In certain markets, notably the US, this has proven popular, and contributed to the number of listed equities on its bourses falling from nearly 9000 in 1997, to a mere 5000 by the start of 2020, a decline of more than 40%.

The popularity of raising capital by other means should not be viewed as a death knell for public markets. Entrepreneurs will raise money where they can source capital at the lowest cost.  During 2021, we saw a record IPO spree as low interest rates resulted in lofty valuations. Even in developed markets we saw an increase in the number of listings with the Nasdaq surpassing the Shanghai stock exchange.

The number of new listings has reversed course in 2022, with the volume coming in 45% below the previous year, as investor appetite for risky equities waned. Unicorn IPOs (private companies valued at more than $1 billion) fell even more sharply, 81% less than in 2021, after the rich multiples afforded to them resulted in 91% trading below their 2021 IPO price. This, however, still translated into more than 1 300 new investment opportunities.

Due to South Africa’s economic and political landscape, and low growth, many innovative companies in South Africa are not seeking to IPO because local valuations are too low. South African stocks trade at a sharp discount to emerging market stocks, which in turn trade at a sharp discount to developed market stocks.

In South Africa, no stocks IPO’d in 2021 (when the rest of the world saw a listing boom), only 1 in 2020 and 0 in 2019. It is therefore critical for domestic investors to expand their investment universe beyond the local market if they want to gain exposure to new disruptors and innovators.

Total number of IPOs in 2021

Americas

532

Asia Pacific

1148

EMEIA

756

South Africa

0

 

While there might be a misconception that investors have fewer stocks to choose from, the numbers indicate that this is simply not the case when taking a global perspective. There are more than 40,000 stocks listed globally and 40,000 is sufficient for a fundamentally inclined investor. What matters more is the quality of his/her research and the ability not to get caught up in the prevailing narrative of the time.  The year 2021 was a record one for IPOs, but many people who invested in them now wish they hadn’t. Just because a Unicorn is set to IPO does not mean it will deliver the goods.