New Research Reveals Growth In Tech Post-Brexit

Read about the dramatic increase in profits and growth in tech companies post-Brexit

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New Research Reveals Value of AIM Listed Tech Continues to Grow
Unified Communications

Published: August 9, 2017

Ian Taylor Editor

Ian Taylor

Editor

New research from Moore Stephens, the Top Ten accounting and advisory firm, has revealed that the average enterprise value of technology companies on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) has reached £88.9m – a 21.3% increase from 31 December 2016 and a 51% increase since the Brexit decision.

Moore Stephens’ ‘Tech AIM Barometer’ revealed there was only one tech IPO on AIM over the six month period to 30 June 2017 – Ethernity Networks – down from eight in 2016 and seven the year before. Moore Stephens believes was due to a combination of factors, including the political and economic uncertainty caused by Brexit negotiations and, to a lesser extent, the recent General Election.

Commenting on the research, Dougie Hunter, Associate Director at Moore Stephens, said: “The fewer number of IPOs can be explained by a combination of factors that of course includes Brexit and a General Election, but also the fact that many private equity firms are choosing outright sales through secondary buyouts rather than exiting through IPO.”

Despite the lack of tech IPOs on AIM, Moore Stephens’ Tech AIM Barometer has revealed that more than £275m was raised from secondary fundraising in the six month period – a higher figure than for the whole of 2016 (£224m) – and included the three largest individual company fundraises since 2015 (GBG, Learning Technologies Group and Telit).

By way of a sector-analysis, the dramatic growth shown in the past six months has been driven by:

  • hardware companies – increasing by 35%;
  • support services – increasing by 21%;
  • software by 20%.

By comparison, the FTSE AIM All-share index increased by 14% and the FTSE All-share index by just 3%.

Although the majority (over 90%) of the businesses analysed are based here in the UK, the Ethernity Networks IPO was in fact the first overseas tech IPO on AIM since 2015. This, coupled with the high secondary fundraising levels, illustrates the fact that international investors view UK tech on AIM as value for money due to not only a favourable forex environment, but also the recent strong track-record.

Dougie Hunter continued: “From our perspective, we are seeing an increasing pipeline as tech companies with IPO plans are waiting to see exactly what happens with the terms of Brexit. Our view is that as the landscape becomes clearer, there will be an increase in the number of tech companies that IPO in early 2018.”

UC Today Opinion

When you take into consideration the uncertainty surrounding many Britons with regards to what will happen after Brexit takes place, it’s great to see that technology companies (in the AIM at least) already seem to be benefitting from the country’s disconnection with the EU.

As a website that focuses specifically on UC, UC Today also found it interesting to see that a large part of this success was attributed to a 20% increase in software and a 21% increase in customer support services, thus demonstrating how those growing cloud trends such as UCaaS, CCaaS, IM, AI, Chatbots and WebRTC are in part responsible not only for helping to improve customer engagement but are also playing a key role in helping the technology industry thrive flourish in times of doubt.

Have any thoughts about this research that you would like to add? Do you think Brexit will have a longterm growth effect on the technology industry? If you’ve had any experience with customer support service technology that you feel would confirm or refute these claims, please feel free to share your opinion in our comments section.

 

 

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