What is AIM?
The AIM market (‘AIM’) of the London Stock Exchange plc (the ‘Exchange’) is targeted at growing international companies. AIM is an ideal public market for growing and entrepreneurial international businesses seeking to expand and raise their global profile.
Why go to AIM?
The reasons AIM companies give for joining AIM are to:
- provide access to capital for growth
- create a market for their shares
- obtain an objective market value
- enhance status with customers and suppliers
- encourage employee commitment
- increase a company’s ability to make acquisitions
- create a heightened public profile
How much does an AIM listing cost?
The total average fees on an AIM admission depend on the nature of the company coming to the market, which affects the nature and level of due diligence needed. The base level for admission costs would normally be in the region of £350,000 – £450,000. On top of these fees, the company will need to pay the broker’s fees for raising funds (unless the AIM listing is by way of an introduction), which may be in the region of 4 – 6% of funds raised.
The key adviser that a company needs when seeking an AIM listing is a nominated adviser (a ‘Nomad’). We would be happy to recommend Nomads to you and you can find a list of the Exchange’s approved Nomads on their website here.
One of the duties of the Nomad is to confirm to the Exchange that the company is appropriate to be listed on AIM and that the requirements of the AIM rules for companies and Nomads have been complied with. The Nomad will carry out due diligence on the company and its directors to assess whether or not they would like to sponsor the company and to ascertain whether the company is suitable for an AIM listing.
A company will also need to retain a broker (although many Nomads will also act as broker). Other advisers who will be involved in an AIM admission are lawyers to the company, reporting accountants, lawyers to the Nomad, public relations advisers, printers and registrars who will administer the register of members. We can give a company an indication of likely costs levels, which in part depend on the nature of its business.
Can your company float on AIM?
The directors of the company need to have confidence in the company’s business plan. The directors also need to be able to sell the company’s strategy and prospects to the Nomad. The Nomad tends to see ‘management’ as the central ingredient in any float.
The process of flotation requires a substantial investment of time and therefore the board needs to be prepared for the
distraction from the company’s day-to-day business that it causes.
There is no requirement for a company to have a trading record prior to an AIM admission, although, practically, investors may be more willing to invest in a company with a proven track record.
Once admitted to AIM, a company incorporated in an EEA country must publish annual audited accounts prepared in accordance with International Accounting Standards (IAS). Whilst the Exchange prefers all companies to publish their accounts in accordance with IAS, a company incorporated in a non-EEA country may publish annual audited accounts in accordance with IAS, US, Canadian, or Japanese generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) or Australian International Financial Reporting Standards. A half yearly report also needs to be prepared.
A company’s AIM shares must be freely transferable (subject to limited exceptions). The company’s shares will need to be eligible for electronic settlement and the main electronic system in the UK is CREST, operated by Euroclear UK & Ireland Limited. CREST is a central securities depository (CSD) that operates an electronic settlement system allowing UK shares to be held, transferred and settled between CREST members in dematerialised (or paperless) form, that is without the need to use share certificates or written instruments of transfer. The shares of non- UK companies would ordinarily be settled through CREST by using CREST depositary interests (issued by CREST), which are to be distinguished from other depositary interests such as depositary receipts (‘DRs’). DRs will only be considered appropriate for admission to AIM where the AIM company is incorporated in a jurisdiction which prohibits, or unduly restricts, the offering or admission of its securities outside of that country.
Where a company’s main activity is a business which has not been independent and earning revenue for at least two years, it must ensure that all related parties (including directors, their associates and shareholders who hold 10% or more of the company) and applicable employees (those who either alone or with members of their family hold 0.5% or more of the company) must agree not to dispose of any interest in their shares in the company for a period of one year from the date of admission to AIM.
If the company is an investing company, it must, as a condition of its admission, raise a minimum of £6 million in cash via an equity fundraising on, or immediately before, admission.
How long does it take?
The whole process from the appointment of advisers through to admission would normally take at least 12 weeks and often longer. Most companies start planning an AIM float several months in advance. In particular, a company will need to devote time to finalising its business plan and, unless the company is a start up, building up a good track record of financial performance which will make it attractive to investors.
Admission document
A company seeking to be admitted to AIM will need to produce a prospectus style document called an admission document. The AIM rules set out the requirements for the contents of an admission document and these include most of the matters which would need to be disclosed in a prospectus. A company may either include its last three years’ audited accounts in the
admission document or an accountants’ report on the company’s state of affairs and profit and loss for the last three years.
In the case of a start up no audited accounts or accountants’ report will be required and in the case of a recently formed company, only those accounts which it has prepared need to be included or reported on i.e. there is no minimum three year trading requirement for an AIM listing. A Nomad will often require an accountants’ report to be included. Interim accounts (or an accountants’ report on the interim period) may need to be included where more than 9 months has elapsed since the end of the last financial year. Any such interim accounts would need to cover a period of at least six months. Usually, a company’s last three years’ historical information will need to be presented using IAS.
The AIM rules require a statement by a company’s directors to be included in the admission document which confirms that the company has sufficient working capital for a period of at least 12 months from the admission date. The company’s Nomad will therefore require a working capital report to be prepared by the company in conjunction with its auditors.
On the application for admission to AIM, the company will be required to repeat the working capital sufficiency statement and also provide a number of other representations to the Exchange. These will include confirmation that the company has satisfactory reporting procedures in place to enable the directors to make judgments as to the financial position and prospects of the company.
The directors of the company will be personally responsible for the contents of the admission document and a detailed verification exercise will need to be carried out to ensure the accuracy of the document.
What are the continuing obligations?
The continuing obligations for AIM companies are generally less stringent than those for fully listed companies. For acquisitive companies, AIM has the advantage of not requiring a circular to be produced and shareholder approval obtained except where the transaction to be undertaken is a reverse takeover or a substantial disposal.
An AIM company is obliged to notify a regulatory information service without delay of any new developments which are not public knowledge concerning a change in its financial condition, sphere of activity, the performance of its business or its expectation of its performance which, if made public, would be likely to lead to a substantial movement in the price of its shares. The AIM rules specify numerous matters requiring announcement including directors’ dealings, substantial transactions by the company, and changes through whole percentage points to significant (3%-plus) shareholdings in the company.
AIM companies must send their annual accounts to shareholders within six months of the financial year end and also announce half yearly results within three months of the end of the relevant six month period. Accounts must include, inter alia, disclosure of transactions with related parties and each director’s remuneration.
The AIM Rules further require that AIM companies maintain an easily accessible website, with up-to-date management and financial information on the company. This would include details of its business, directors and major shareholders, a copy of the admission document or prospectus, and copies of documents recently sent to shareholders, such as the annual accounts and any subsequent reports. Other required information includes the company’s constitutional documents, details of any other exchanges on which the company has agreed to have any of its securities traded, the number of AIM securities in issue (which must be kept up to date) and details of the company’s corporate governance code and whether it is subject to the UK City Code on Takeovers and Mergers or any other such legislation.
Directors will not be able to deal in the AIM company’s shares when they have information which might affect the company’s share price or in the two months period leading up to the company’s announcement of results.
Quite apart from the requirements of the AIM rules, the company’s Nomad may also impose additional restrictions on the company in order to make it more attractive to investors. An example is the common requirement for directors and substantial shareholders to be restricted from selling their shares for a period after admission. In addition, the Nomad may require the company to follow corporate governance best practice. At the very least, a Nomad is likely to insist upon the appointment of non-executive directors (assuming none are already in place).
If an AIM company does not comply with the AIM rules, the Exchange may suspend trading in the company’s shares and ultimately may seek to cancel the company’s AIM admission.
https://www.londonstockexchange.com/raise-finance/equity/aim