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LONDON (Reuters) - London Stock Exchange CEO Xavier Rolet is stepping down immediately and its chairman will not seek re-election, as the exchange tries to draw a line under a row with a top shareholder over management succession.
Rolet had previously said he would leave at the end of 2018, but activist hedge fund TCI accused Chairman Donald Brydon of pushing him out and called a shareholder meeting to try to reverse the decision and oust Brydon.
The LSE board has asked TCI to say by 1300 GMT on Wednesday if it will withdraw its shareholder meeting request to “avoid further disruption and potential damage to the company”.
The row - coming at a tricky time for the LSE as it risks losing a chunk of its derivatives clearing business to erstwhile merger partner Deutsche Boerse due to Brexit - had dragged in the Bank of England.
Rolet’s departure after 8-1/2 years in charge could trigger fresh speculation that a rival exchange such as ICE could bid for the LSE, though analysts say any mega-bourse deal would face intense scrutiny by competition authorities.
In a statement issued by the LSE on Wednesday, Rolet said there had been a “great deal of unwelcome publicity” surrounding his departure “which has not been helpful to the company.”
“At the request of the board, I have agreed to step down as CEO with immediate effect. I will not be returning to the office of CEO or director under any circumstances,” he added.
The LSE said Brydon had also indicated he would not stand for re-election at the company’s annual general meeting in 2019, and that Chief Financial Officer David Warren would replace Rolet on an interim basis.
The Financial Conduct Authority agreed to Brydon staying on until 2019 to ensure an orderly succession, the LSE said.
TCI had no immediate comment on the announcement.
The LSE said Brydon and the board believed that in 2019, under a new chairman, “it would be in shareholders’ interests to have a new team at the helm to steer the future progress of the company.”
However, UBS analyst Michael Werner said Rolet’s immediate departure created significant uncertainty over future strategy and posed a challenge in defending market share from Deutsche Boerse. UBS has a “neutral” rating on LSE shares.
Simon Brazier, a fund manager at Investec Asset Management, which is a small shareholder in LSE, said the exchange is now in “a worse position than before this saga started.”
At 1208 GMT, the stock was down 1.5 percent at 3,743 pence, in a UK blue-chip index 0.5 percent lower. LSE shares have risen around five-fold under Rolet’s tenure.
‘BROADLY DAMAGING’
Rolet is credited with turning the LSE into a diversified exchange group by acquiring a controlling stake in LCH, one of the world’s biggest clearing houses, and expanding the bourse’s activities in stock indexes.
But the Frenchman and former investment banker was unable to seal a merger with Deutsche Boerse, the exchange’s third attempt at an Anglo-German tie up.
Relations between Rolet and Brydon had become strained, several people who have worked at the exchange said.
“It would be easier getting into the cockpit of a plane flying over a city than getting Rolet and Brydon into the same office,” a person who has worked with both said.