MOSCOW (Reuters) - The New York Stock Exchange hopes less stringent rules will help persuade several Russian companies to raise money on its markets next year, taking business from arch-rival London.
NYSE Euronext's
"I would not be surprised to see several ... potential IPOs (initial public offerings) in Moscow and New York taking place in the next 12 months," Ganyushin told Reuters in an interview on Thursday.
He was speaking a day after telecoms firm MegaFon
Russian companies have for years preferred London over New York as the venue for their overseas listings, attracted by its close geographical location and less stringent disclosure and audit rules.
London has more than 50 Russian companies on its main market compared with only a handful in New York.
Mobile phone operator Vimpelcom
The NYSE has invited around 50 U.S. investors to an event with Russian First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov and Russian companies and funds at its Wall Street address next Monday.
U.S. investors have lost billions of dollars on U.S.-listed Chinese companies in numerous accounting scandals and drumming up interest in other emerging-market firms could be a tough task.
Russia's reputation as being a country rife with corruption and red tape is another hurdle to be overcome.
JOBS ACT
The 2002 Sarbanes-Oxley Act, introduced after the Enron and WorldCom scandals, sought to tighten auditing but resulted in scaring many companies away from a New York listing due to the increased burden of compliance.
The costs of preparing an IPO could reach $500,000 or more according to a survey by accountants PwC. Russian telecoms company Rostelecom
But under the Jobs Act signed this year, it will be easier for emerging-growth companies with less than $1 billion in revenue to raise capital, because they will be exempt from an outside audit of internal controls for up to five years.
Ganyushin said the Jobs Act comes on top of other changes that help foreign private issuers.
"For the last three years it's much easier to list in the U.S. as a foreign company than a U.S. company - you can follow your home corporate governance practices, you don't have to have an independent board, you don't have to report in US GAAP," he said.
The NYSE is also an attractive venue due to higher valuations achieved for issuers and lower risks of executing IPOs, he argues.
Ganyushin sees the NYSE as a complementary venue to Moscow and is encouraging companies to list on both markets.
He hopes New York could attract some of the privatisations the Russian government is planning. Shipping firm Sovcomflot is one slated for 2013.
"The global shipping sector is based in New York," said Ganyushin, adding that the company would fit well there, while declining to comment specifically on Sovcomflot's plans.
(Reporting by Megan Davies; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Erica Billingham)
Source: http://news.yahoo.com/york-exchange-courts-russian-companies-190327273--finance.html
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