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PrimaryBid and Winterflood collaborate to enhance retail investor participation in UK capital markets, including IPOs and follow-on fundraises.
The initiative aims to digitize and simplify retail investor access to primary market deals, reducing barriers for nearly £300bn of uninvested ISA monies.
This collaboration aligns with recent regulatory reforms to include retail investors in public company fundraisings and modernize the UK's capital raising infrastructure.
LONDON, January 26 2023
PrimaryBid and Winterflood today announce a collaboration to further advance UK retail investor participation in equity and debt capital markets, including IPOs and follow-on fundraises. Together the firms will offer API integration to any stockbroker or wealth manager wishing to distribute primary market deals to retail investor clients, leveraging the UK’s retail trading network which currently pools secondary market retail liquidity.
This digitisation initiative aims to significantly lower the frictional barriers in the UK’s retail capital raising infrastructure, including simplifying participation from almost £300bn of uninvested ISA monies currently held as cash1. Despite recent regulatory reforms designed to level the playing field for retail investors in the UK’s public markets, the distribution of IPOs and other time-sensitive transactions has traditionally remained a manual process and focused on institutional participation. Historically too many investors have not been presented with details of public company capital raisings and this collaboration will help address the absence of end-to-end automation and digitisation within the UK’s retail distribution infrastructure.
This initiative comes at a critical moment for the UK’s capital markets and for the status of retail investors within them. In 2022 HM Treasury’s ‘Secondary Capital Raising Review’, led by Mark Austin, stated clearly that retail investors should no longer be excluded from UK public company fundraisings while acknowledging that the framework to facilitate this participation was still novel and would require significant investment. In parallel, the arbitrary financial ceiling on retail investor participation in public company capital raises is set to be eliminated in 2023 via the Financial Services and Markets Bill, as part of the Chancellor’s commitment to widening the ownership of public companies.