THE City of London has embarked on 2026 with a palpable outbreak of optimism. The FTSE 100 breaching 10,000 points is one driver of sentiment; the expanding IPO pipeline is another.
Of the 23 London listings in 2025, 11 took place in the fourth quarter, according to EY data, including the challenger bank Shawbrook and Pathos Communications, a PR agency. There are more to come – and that flow feels like it will be almost regardless of the turn that geopolitics takes. So much for the recent doom and gloom.
This year, the public markets will prove to be the natural solution for the glut of private equity-backed assets struggling to service debts. And the regulatory reforms the Quoted Companies Alliance and others have campaigned for consistently will also bear more fruit. They include the changes to UK listings rules 18 months ago and prospectuses coming shortly that mean the process of bringing a company to market is more flexible, founder-friendly and internationally competitive. The fresh focus on supporting retail investors and rethinking ineffectual “capital at risk” warnings is also welcome.
There is more to do, including driving pension and ISA cash into UK equities and extending the stamp duty relief for IPOs to the whole market. This government has its challenges but the clear correlation of a healthy UK capital market with a healthy UK economy and the millions of investors whose fortunes are tied to them both continues to be an important north star. The City Minister, Lucy Rigby, has been such a frequent visitor to the London Stock Exchange I wouldn’t be surprised if she has her own security pass.
But I think it is worthwhile pausing to question where all this is going. In common with the government I want the UK to strive for growth, which takes many forms. And beyond the IPO tally and keeping track of the billions in capital raised, we must also focus on the absolute number of companies whose shares are traded in London.
I would dearly love 2026 to end with more UK quoted companies than it started. That’s one sort of growth to strive for. In 20 years, it has only happened three times: in 2006, 2007 and 2021. Despite the momentum I describe above, I cannot confidently claim this will be another, much-needed “up” year.
I would be delighted to be proved wrong because volume matters just as much as value. Such a lot of London’s reputation as a world-leading capital market comes from its breadth. Unlike many other financial centres, megacaps trade stock here alongside microcaps. More than half of London’s quoted companies have a market value of less than £100m. They embrace numerous industries and regional geographies – a UK-wide network of productivity. At the QCA, we believe London can and should be the pre-eminent capital of growth capital to support them all.
