LSE reports strong second half results and identifies Eikon outage problem

London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) reported a strong set of first half results but acknowledged that the disruption issues on news and data platform Eikon, which was part of the $27 bn Refinitiv acquisition, was not acceptable and promised to fix the problem.

There have been a number of outages – the most recent one on Monday. “We have identified the issue and are addressing it,” David Schwimmer, LSE’s chief executive, told reporters at the group’s interim results.

He said the problem was due to a corrupted server, which had sometimes prevented data from being distributed.

In its half-year report, the LSEG said it was ahead of schedule in its planned cost cuts related to the integration of Refinitiv and raised its full-year guidance for savings this year from £88m to £125m.

The exchange’s aim is to create a one-stop shop for data, trading and analytics but there were concerns regarding the costs of LSEG absorbing such a large company.

However, the group said interim adjusted margins of 49.4% would drop in the second half due to investment plans and higher travel costs, before reaching their 50% target in 2023.

The first six months saw total revenues rise 4.6% to £3.36 bn, aided by a 9.6% rise in capital markets revenue as listings enjoyed their best first half since 2014, and higher fixed income volumes. Meanwhile, operating profit jumped to £1.17 bn from £457m a year earlier.

Schwimmer said he expected the rest of 2021 to remain busy for initial public offerings (IPOs) and a modest number of special purpose acquisition companies to list.

©Markets Media Europe 2021

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