Key facts
- SpaceX's IPO raised $75 billion, with a portion allocated to UK retail investors.
- Peel Hunt CEO Steven Fine suggested the IPO could draw more British investors back to equity markets.
- Peel Hunt reported a 57% revenue increase to £143.5 million for the year ending March.
- The broker's M&A practice significantly boosted its investment banking turnover.
- Peel Hunt achieved a pre-tax profit of £21.1 million, reversing a previous loss.
The chief executive of Peel Hunt, Steven Fine, suggested that the recent $75 billion IPO of SpaceX could stimulate renewed interest in equity markets among UK retail investors. Millions of shares were allocated to British investors in the SpaceX float, with demand reportedly leading to reduced allocations for many.
Fine stated that such high-profile listings, alongside anticipated IPOs from AI companies like Anthropic and OpenAI, focus attention on the potential of equity markets. He described these as 'once-in-a-generation' events that highlight 'what the art of the possible might be from equity markets,' suggesting that retail investors are eager to participate and are more stable than often perceived.
Fine also noted a growing recognition that the UK stock market has overcome significant concerns, indicating that interest is not solely focused on global tech giants but also on dynamic developments within the domestic market.
These comments coincide with Peel Hunt's financial results, which showed a 57% increase in revenue to £143.5 million for the year ending March. The firm's investment banking division experienced a more than doubling of turnover, largely due to fees from its mergers and acquisitions (M&A) practice. Peel Hunt reported a pre-tax profit of £21.1 million, reversing a loss from the previous year, and declared a final dividend of 4.9p. The company also noted that 62 FTSE 350 companies are among its clients, with the average market capitalization of its client base increasing by over 30% to £1.1 billion.
