Ann: ADDRESS: NZX: Chairman & CEO Address to Annual Meeting

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    • Release Date: 21/05/15 14:10
    • Summary: ADDRESS: NZX: Chairman & CEO Address to Annual Meeting
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    					NZX
    21/05/2015 14:10
    ADDRESS
    NOT PRICE SENSITIVE
    REL: 1410 HRS NZX Limited
    
    ADDRESS: NZX: Chairman & CEO Address to Annual Meeting
    
    Please see below text from the speech of NZX Chairman Andrew Harmos
    (delivered by Director Neil Paviour-Smith in Andrew's absence) and attached
    the presentation slides of CEO Tim Bennett, from NZX's Annual Meeting, being
    held this afternoon in Auckland.
    
    Note that full videos of the speeches will be available tomorrow on NZX's
    website NZXGroup.com
    
    For further information please contact:
    Kate McLaughlin
    Corporate Communications
    T: 09 309 3654
    M: 027 533 4529
    E: [email protected]
    
    21 May 2015
    
    Chairman's Speech to NZX Annual Meeting 2015
    
    Introduction
    Our equity markets again captured the headlines in 2014, with 16 companies
    listing during the year, $4.7 billion in new capital listed, and total equity
    market capitalisation to GDP increasing from 37.8% in 2013 to 42.1% at 31
    December 2014.
    
    NZX's financial performance during the financial year was satisfactory. We
    delivered fully imputed dividend returns of 6 cents per share, equivalent to
    a gross yield of 6.7% based on a volume weighted average price for the 2014
    calendar year of $1.2449.
    
    The imperative of growth - particularly in shareholder return - is at the
    front of our minds. We are conscious that our recent share price performance
    has been sub-optimal.
    
    NZX has invested heavily in what matters to our capital market's growth, and
    in response to growth opportunities we've identified. The Board and
    management are committed to driving those investments to deliver the enhanced
    shareholder returns that we foresaw when making them. We remain very
    confident that this growth will be delivered - our suite of opportunities and
    businesses has never looked better.
    
    Strategy
    So, what is the strategy that underpins our growth aspirations?
    
    At our core, NZX is a markets business. But not any market. We build and
    operate markets that are a critical part of the economies in which we
    operate.
    
    Markets - and our business - are more than exchanges - they are networks that
    include the underlying infrastructure, the products that trade, the
    intermediaries and investors that trade them, and the data and information
    that drives activity.
    
    They include other things as well - and like any network - a weakness in any
    component affects the functioning of the whole. These components include a
    strong economy with good prospects for growth - otherwise why raise capital,
    and why invest? Stability and predictability in regulation; investor
    confidence, sufficient savings and a coherent savings policy to provide funds
    for investment; financial literacy: and so the list goes on.
    
    Our focus is on building and operating capital, agricultural commodity and
    energy markets in New Zealand and Australia, and investing sensibly in the
    adjacencies they rely on to succeed. Each of these markets is at a different
    stage of development and our position within each is different. But they all
    share common characteristics: they are all core to the economies in which we
    operate, have high growth potential - and they all rely on similar network
    components to work effectively.
    
    Our decision to invest in the passive Exchange Traded Funds management
    sector, that has been an under-developed product set in New Zealand, will
    contribute strongly to NZX's future growth strategy and performance.
    
    That sector has shown enormous growth abroad as demand for low cost, low
    maintenance, efficient, liquid and diversified investment solutions gathers
    momentum for investors at all levels of sophistication.
    
    There is almost no limit to the product range that can be offered via this
    medium, and NZX is ideally placed to lead the development of this offering in
    New Zealand. The keys to success will be good products, good distribution and
    education of investors.
    
    While we have tremendous opportunities to grow the NZX businesses, we have to
    prioritise appropriately and focus on a smaller set of the most attractive
    opportunities. We have limited resources, and by their nature, markets take a
    long time to develop. I will touch briefly on agricultural commodity and
    capital markets - I won't dwell on our involvement in electricity, where our
    team is hard at work on ensuring a compelling response to the tender process
    for the various market operations contracts we have with the Electricity
    Authority.
    
    Agricultural Commodity Markets
    A number of prerequisites are in place for the emergence of financial
    agricultural commodity-based markets in New Zealand and Australia. This
    includes high growth, increasing complexity, rising capital investment,
    global investor interest and price volatility.
    
    There is now a real sense that NZX's dairy derivatives market is on the cusp
    of shifting from a niche commodity market into a developing financial market.
    Signs of this are the demand for real-time GlobalDairyTrade price data, the
    increased number of participants trading the market, and increased financial
    media coverage globally. Volume growth is exponential - this market has left
    its competitor markets in the dust. Its growth trajectory and the opportunity
    to grow into sensible adjacencies (such as the recently launched butter
    contract) suggest that it will become a strong financial contributor to NZX.
    
    Capital Markets
    The capital markets are at the early stages of a 20-year growth journey. New
    Zealanders are increasingly investing in the equity market directly and
    indirectly through KiwiSaver, and correspondingly, small and medium sized
    businesses now see an IPO as a real option for a capital raising. Despite
    this, there remain a number of risks and vulnerabilities - and the capital
    markets remain in a building phase.
    
    The supply of local companies looking to raise capital is insufficient to
    meet the growing demand from investors. In addition, the ASX and crowdfunding
    are providing other options for New Zealand companies and investors.
    
    While a new and much stronger regulatory environment is rebuilding trust in
    the markets, this does not come without increasing costs for brokers, fund
    managers and advisors. As a result, the minimum size or scale required to
    operate in the New Zealand market is increasing. As financial markets
    participants look for efficiencies, it's an easy decision for those of them
    that are offshore owned to take their New Zealand representation back to home
    base. While our view is that this provides them only with a short term cost
    palliative and in the long term damages their own competitiveness - that's
    not usually a welcome message and nor does it provide an answer to short term
    cost or headcount pressures. So, we have to grow the scale of the market to
    meet demand. A lack of scale in New Zealand combined with a similar
    regulatory environment in Australia and an already high level of foreign
    ownership of distribution and funds management, risks large parts of our
    market being owned and operated from offshore. This is as serious an issue
    for our economy as it is for NZX as a company.
    
    This has been why in 2014 we have worked to 'put more products on the shelf -
    a systematic IPO pipeline management process, approval to launch a new and
    innovative growth market, NXT, the launch of equity futures are examples.
    This is also where the Exchange Traded Fund strategy I mentioned earlier fits
    in.
    
    Defend and strengthen the NZX franchise
    Over the past two years, we have overhauled the governance of our regulatory
    function, as well as its organisation and processes. We have also continued
    to develop a world-class operations and technology infrastructure.
    
    That enables us to continue to strongly advocate for the need to ensure
    efforts to grow the capital markets are coordinated and to ensure the
    economics of the market are not eroded by offshore competitors - this is
    consistent with the key role NZX plays in the New Zealand economy.
    
    While, as we have said on many occasions, our businesses and our capital
    markets are in the best shape they have been in for some time - and with
    strong prospects - we need to defend the position they are in.
    We will respond to competitors that have the potential to erode the most
    attractive parts of our business, erode the economics of the industry and
    limit the market's ability to grow and prosper going forward.
    
    Behind many of the buzzwords of the day - such as integration of our economy
    with Australia - there are dangers and risks of unintended consequences. We
    will respond strongly to matters that threaten our critical role as a
    national exchange to the economy. Australia feels these threats also, but
    from different sources. ASX has been strong in advocating for retention of
    clearing facilities in Australia, and likewise we will do here. Again, like
    ASX, NZX has a low appetite for the long-term risks from outsourcing of
    ownership and governance of key market infrastructure to non-resident
    operators and regulators, and for actions that have the consequence of
    reduction of choice, scale and liquidity in our markets.
    
    These themes are reflected in all that NZX does - our values and the choices
    we make.
    
    Farewell
    While the future is what matters most - and the environment we are in all too
    often draws us into short term metrics - it's the consistent delivery of long
    term performance that should attract most interest, and be valued most
    highly.
    
    Since demutualisation in 2002, shortly before which I joined the board, the
    company has undergone huge change and growth. I do not claim credit for this
    - there have been a large number of very talented people who have contributed
    in many capacities and levels.
    
    The company is in great hands with the continuing board under the leadership
    of James Miller and management team under Tim's leadership. My thanks go to
    all of you for your support as shareholders and to the broader NZX team: few
    in this organisation regard their roles here as simply a job - and none
    underestimate the importance of the organisation to the health of our economy
    and the well-being of New Zealanders.
    
    There remains much to do and achieve - I am confident that under the
    leadership of James and Tim, our aspirations for continued growth and strong
    and vibrant capital markets will be realised.
    End CA:00264637 For:NZX    Type:ADDRESS    Time:2015-05-21 14:10:21
    				
 
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