The UK government has turned to private equity heavyweights for help with a problem that’s been festering for years: companies are leaving the London Stock Exchange faster than new ones are arriving. Downing Street has been holding discussions with leaders from major buyout firms, trying to convince them to list their portfolio companies in London rather than shipping them off to New York or staying private altogether.

The numbers behind London’s listing drought

The post-Brexit era effectively put the IPO market in what analysts have described as a “deep freeze,” and while the temperature has ticked up slightly, nobody’s thawing champagne just yet.

IPO activity in Q1 2026 came in slightly higher than the same period in 2025, though global uncertainties, including trade tensions and interest rate policy, continue to keep prospective issuers on the sidelines.

Private equity-backed IPOs raised $62.1 billion worldwide in 2025, a significant jump from $40.6 billion in 2024. That’s a roughly 53% increase. London just hasn’t been catching its fair share of that flow.