London Stock Exchange buys Turquoise

LSE IT chief David Lester tipped to be head of new joint venture

The LSE is making peace with the city

The London Stock Exchange (LSE) announced this morning that it will take control of rival trading platform Turquoise.

The LSE will merge the platform with its own Baikal operation, to create "a new pan-European trading venture".

The merged entity will be 60 per cent owned by LSE and 40 per cent by existing Turquoise shareholders and will continue to trade under the Turquoise name.

Xavier Rolet, chief executive of the LSE, said: "Turquoise's existing pan-European footprint is a strong proposition and together with the introduction of new trading technology and a neutral structure, we believe it is now well positioned to be an agent of change and to capture a healthy slice of the market's growth potential."

The exchange will incur exceptional costs of up to £20m in the current financial year, comprising the write-off of legacy technology costs, and other restructuring and integration costs, including contract exit costs.

Turquoise was set up by a consortium of investment banks following deregulation, and was an attempt to force traditional exchanges such as the LSE to lower trading fees. It began operating around 18 months ago.

But the banks were no longer willing to fund the unprofitable platform after being hit hard by the recession. The deal this week is being seen by some in the City as a political move by the LSE to make peace with the banks.

Christopher Morris, director of consultancy Aequitas Associates, told the Financial Times: “It is rebuilding goodwill with the banking community that will be the most valuable asset.”

The LSE will fully fund the cash needs of the new venture for the first two years and says it wants to bring the business to sustainable profitability.

David Lester, the LSE's head of IT, has been tipped as the head of the new joint venture, which is expected to be run as an independent operation.