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Wednesday 14 January 2015 8:05 pm

Company floats in 2014 score higher than FTSE 100 average

By: Express KCS

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IF YOU invested in any the 30 companies that completed public floats last year, chances are you’ll be happy you did.

Research out from Deloitte shows the 2014 additions to the share market generated an average return of 12.4 per cent, outperforming the FTSE 100 by 14.4 percentage points.

An investment of £1,000 in each of the 30 IPOs would be worth £33,715 at the year end, whereas a £1,000 investment in the FTSE at each IPO date would have fallen to £29,388, Deloitte found.

The business advisory firm found the 11 IPOs launched in June 2014 showed the highest return of 32.2 per cent, nearly triple the average for the full year.

Out of the 30 IPOs, 22 were private equity backed and they generated an average return of 14.6 per cent, significantly higher than non-private equity backed IPOs at 6.4 per cent.

The best returns, compared to the FTSE 100 average, were enjoyed by Allied Minds (95.7 percentage points higher), Spire (84.4 percentage points higher) and Game Digital (84 percentage points higher).

However, companies that floated in the last year which did not fare so well included Intelligent Energy (50.7 percentage points worse than the FTSE 100 average) and Seplat (30.4 percentage points worse).

John Hammond, head of equity capital markets at Deloitte, said:

“IPOs in 2014 have performed better than many would have expected.

Hammond said he expected the momentum of public floats on the London Stock Exchange (LSE) to continue well into this year, albeit with some potential deterrents.

“There could be a few hiccups arising from the May election, a potential interest rate rise and a weak Eurozone but overall we see opportunities in the market and potentially the busiest first quarter for IPOs in years.”

Already in the first weeks of 2015 equipment hirer HSS has readied itself for a float, while Autotrader, Aldermore, BCA, and Moy Park may follow in the coming months.

Challenger bank Shawbrook could also test the market.

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