LSE considering Furse successor

Posted by admin on 27 October, 2008 under Business news | Be the First to Comment

The London Stock Exchange has said it has begun “succession planning” over who will replace its chief executive Dame Clara Furse.

Dame Clara has been at the firm for eight years – though the LSE said there was no suggestion that her departure was imminent.

A newspaper report said that a City headhunting firm had been lined up to oversee the new appointment

During her tenure Dame Clara has fended off several hostile takeover bids.

Last year it merged with Italian exchange group, Borsa Italiana and stakes in it have been sold off to Middle East investors in a bid to keep full ownership out of foreign hands.

‘Natural’ thinking

The Sunday Telegraph reported that the Exchange said there was “no formal timetable in place” for Dame Clara’s departure – adding she may stay beyond the end of next year.

The LSE played down the report.

“Clara has been with the Exchange for eight years and it’s natural that the Board is thinking about succession planning,” an LSE spokesman said.

“Clara remains fully committed to the Exchange’s continued success and, in particular, to the completion of its integration with Borsa Italiana.”

News reported by The BBC

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Software blamed for LSE failure

Posted by admin on 9 September, 2008 under Business news | Read the First Comment

The London Stock Exchange (LSE) says a computer software glitch was the reason trading was paralysed on Monday.

Traders could not connect to the LSE’s system for nearly seven hours, wiping out most of the day’s trading.

Business resumed this morning and without incident, but the exchange missed out on what could have been one of its busiest days of the year.

It comes at a time when the LSE is facing increasing competition from new rival exchanges.

A spokeswoman for the LSE said the problem had now been fixed.

She denied that the problem had been related to the high volume of trading first thing in the morning.

Strong trading had been predicted for London and other European markets on Monday after the US government stepped in to rescue troubled mortgage firms Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac over the weekend.

New rivals

Since new European Union rules came in last year, the LSE no longer has a monopoly on share trading and new rivals have sprung up.

One of their competitors, Chi-X, said the incident highlighted that the system needed a “root and branch change”, with trading prices taken from a variety of sources.

Its chief executive Peter Randall said: “We’ve newer software and more modern technology and offer real time market data for free.”

Another rival, Turquoise couldn’t have hoped for a better publicity coup for its service in the first week of its operation.

“This emphasises the real need and opening for alternative platforms,” a spokesman for Turquoise said.

He added that Turquoise had put a great deal of time, effort and investment into the resilience of its computer systems.

News reported by The BBC

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