Initial public offerings (IPOs) by companies based in Britain have raised $1.53 billion (€1.41bn) so far in 2017, a 28 per cent decline on last year and the lowest year-to-date total since 2012 as Britain prepares to leave the EU.

With London set to begin the process of leaving the European Union on Wednesday, and elections in France and Germany later this year, the number of suitable windows to launch IPOs in Britain and Europe is expected to be limited.

South Africa’s Brait SE suspended plans to list on the London Stock Exchange on March 24th, citing uncertainty over Brexit.

The caution in Britain contrasts sharply with the rest of the world where proceeds from IPOs have more than doubled, year-to-date, compared with 2016, to total $29.4 billion, including the flotation of messaging app Snap, which raised $3.4 billion in March.

In 2016, equity raising globally fell by more than a quarter, Thomson Reuters data showed, hit by geopolitical shocks and a string of failed IPOs, and bankers said the outlook for 2017 looked shaky.

But there have been more fresh stockmarket listings so far this year globally than any other year-to-date period since 2000, with 302 offerings priced.

However, so far this year only eight British companies have gone public, the slowest start since 2013, the data showed.

Haulier Eddie Stobart is planning to join London’s AIM market in April in an IPO that will raise £130 million for the business and value it at at £550 million.

Since Britain voted to leave the European Union in June 2016, the value of IPOs has declined by 54 per cent and the number of deals has fallen by 30 per cent, the data showed.

– Reuters