Allianz to delist from NYSE, other exchanges

FEB 25, 2010
German insurer Allianz SE said Tuesday it will abandon its listing on the New York Stock Exchange, and others, to reduce complexity. The Munich-based company said it has already filed a written notice to the NYSE and that it would inform exchanges in London, Milan, Paris and the Swiss Exchange in due course. The company said trading on foreign exchanges amounted to less than 5 percent of the total trading of Allianz shares in recent years, despite the fact that about 70 percent of the company's stock is held by investors outside of Germany. The company said it will focus its trading mainly on Frankfurt's Xetra platform and said the move will have no impact on the strategic orientation of Allianz and shouldn't affect its presence on markets outside Germany. "Allianz adjusts to international trading practices and by doing so reduces the complexity of its presence in the capital markets," Allianz management board member Paul Achleitner said in a statement. "The vast majority of international investors already uses our listing in Frankfurt to buy and sell Allianz shares." Shares of Allianz were 1.2 percent higher at €84.67 ($125.31) in Frankfurt morning trading.

Latest News

What it really takes to serve ultra high net worth clients
What it really takes to serve ultra high net worth clients

Most firms think they are ready for the ultra high net worth market. Most are not.

Stifel settles another complaint involving former star Miami broker
Stifel settles another complaint involving former star Miami broker

Stifel has paid or is on the hook for close to a staggering $200 million in damages and settlements to former clients of Chuck Roberts.

Advisor moves: LPL firm Genesis Wealth adds $725M veteran from JPMorgan
Advisor moves: LPL firm Genesis Wealth adds $725M veteran from JPMorgan

UBS also expanded in the Southeast with six advisors overseeing more than $2 billion, while Osaic lured a $300 million family-led practice from Wells Fargo's FiNet.

Salesforce launches Agentic Advisor as AI notetakers threaten CRM dominance
Salesforce launches Agentic Advisor as AI notetakers threaten CRM dominance

The new AI workspace rollout promises to automate the full advisor workflow just as third-party tools wage a turf war for central control of wealth firms' tech stacks.

Advisor moves: LPL lands UBS veteran as &Partners grows by $1.6 billion
Advisor moves: LPL lands UBS veteran as &Partners grows by $1.6 billion

Mega-RIA picks up $250M advisor, while three firms head for &Partners.

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.