Mexico's Upstart Stock Exchange Is Betting on Private Equity Exits
By Justin Villamil
Mexico’s upstart stock exchange needs private equity to go public.
The
Bolsa Institucional de Valores, the bourse known as Biva that began
operations in July, is trying to gain market share from the dominant
Bolsa Mexicana de Valores by focusing on private equity managers ready
to exit their investments and sell shares. The industry has grown 15
percent annually over the past decade, according to a report by El Financiero.
“The story of private equity is very recent in Mexico,” Biva
Chief Executive Officer Maria Ariza said in an interview at Bloomberg’s
offices in Mexico City. “Companies are starting to mature, they’re
starting to leave, and they’re starting to look for an opportunity to
exit their investments. Ideally, one of the ways to do that is through
the capital markets.”
Companies controlled by private-equity firms tend to already
have institutional funding and understand the transparency requirements
they’ll have to meet, according to Ariza. She says the exchange is also
trying to make it easier for smaller, family-owned companies to list
themselves. Mexico’s public equity markets are dominated by large, often
international firms.
The
new exchange, which went live on July 25, has struggled to make headway
against the BMV. Its share of trading volume in Mexico has ranged
anywhere from 0.3 percent to 15 percent over the past month.
To lure companies to list on the exchange, Ariza said the smaller
bourse can offer more individual service, lower costs and technology
that it licenses from New York’s Nasdaq.
To attract traders, Biva plans to create a new platform that
will make shorting stocks easier, though Ariza declined to provide a
time frame. She said the exchange is also working with high-frequency
and hedge funds in an attempt to attract their business.
Ariza is a former private-equity executive, having led an industry association in Mexico for five years before joining
the stock exchange in April. Earlier this month, she scored a win by
persuading Mexican lender Credito Real to switch a 700 million peso ($37
million) bond offering from the Bolsa Mexicana to Biva. Private equity
manager LIV Capital also handed Biva a small win, with plans to move a
recently issued development equity certificate fund -- known as a CKD --
to Biva from the Bolsa Mexicana effective Sept. 21.
Analysts at Banco Santander’s Mexican unit have said that
Biva could eventually capture as much as 28 percent of the larger
bourse’s revenue. Jose-Oriol Bosch, the CEO of the 120-year-old
exchange, told Mexican news agency Notimex this month that his exchange would revise its prices and fees in response to the competition.
But
to capture more market share, Biva needs more companies to list, and so
far, the pipeline is uncertain. Ariza says that some initial public
offerings can be expected over the coming months, but declined to offer
specifics. The company seeks to increase the total trading volume in
Mexico by as much as 30 percent over the next five years.
“The
idea behind Biva is to deepen the market,” Ariza said. “Both in the
number of companies that are participating today, as well as the number
of individual investors that can participate.”
Published in: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-09-19/mexico-s-upstart-stock-exchange-betting-on-private-equity-exits
See more at: Morisberacha.com
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