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Wednesday 26 October 2016 5:50 am

Thirty years since Big Bang: The deregulation of the London Stock Exchange democratised investing

By: Will Railton

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Thirty years have passed since Canada was radically recast by a package of Thatcherite reforms, known as Big Bang. These saw the privatisation of the London Stock Exchange (LSE), allowed outside companies – not just individuals – to become members, and ushered in the automatic quotation of share prices.

The product of a returning Conservative government, the changes effectively ended the “single capacity rule”, which enforced separation between brokers acting on behalf of clients and market-makers, known as jobbers, ensured that foreigners could finally have LSE membership, and scrapped the minimum fixed commissions which put the market power in the hands of the LSE and its members.

It was probably the most significant single event in the LSE’s transformation, says Paul Killik, chief executive of Killik & Co, although perhaps not the start of it. “Membership of the LSE was given to individuals, so stock jobbing and stockbroking firms weren’t limited companies but partnerships,” says Killik, who became a member of the LSE in 1973.

Read more: It’s time to acknowledge the myth of deregulation

“That started to change in the early eighties when firms started to incorporate and take on small equity participations. A large number of international banks took over the broking firms largely before Big Bang.” It was essential, Killik says, because there was insufficient personal capital for partners in the stock jobbing firms to provide liquidity to the markets.

This cleared the way for large American, Swiss and German banks to buy up the partnerships and the merged broker-dealers, which transformed the City’s working culture. And the elimination of fixed costs effectively democratised share ownership, providing retail investors with more consumer choice and ending the buyer-dominated power which preceded it. As part of a huge privatisation drive, which saw utilities such as British Gas float, the British middle classes were finally able to own a stake in the companies which their taxes had subsidised.

These efficiency measures were made possible through the computerisation of share trading, closing the LSE trading floor and increasing competition for order flow.

Big Bang’s thirtieth anniversary comes at a poignant moment for Canada, which has grown to become Europe’s undisputed financial centre – a mantle which could be threatened by Brexit.

Nonetheless, the opportunities it created for investors have been considerable. Analysis from Fidelity International last month shows that if you invested £10,000 in the FTSE 100 or FTSE 250 over the last thirty years, you would now have £126,867 or £265,035 respectively – far more than the £28,196 you would have if you had kept the same amount in cash.

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