By Andrew Hurst
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's flexible financial regulatory regime is giving London a strong edge over New York, especially in attracting foreign company listings, and there is no sign Wall Street can close the gap soon.
Speakers at a Reuters Investment Banking Summit singled out for praise Britain's principles-based system of market regulation, overseen by the Financial Services Authority (FSA), and were critical of what they said was intrusive regulation in the United States.
"The FSA has done well, but it has been helped by the fact that the Americans have made such a mess of it," said a senior investment banker who asked not to be identified. "There is a fine balance to be struck."
London's growing attractiveness at the expense of New York has led to soul-searching on Wall Street and fears that it may be losing its traditional pre-eminence as a global financial center.
The U.S. Sarbanes-Oxley law, adopted in 2002 after a wave of corporate accounting scandals culminating in the collapse of energy giant Enron, is thought by business leaders to put an excessive regulatory burden on companies.
"We have seen a lot of IPOs (initial public offerings) come to London, and there is recognition in the United States that the pendulum has maybe swung too far," said Jerry del Missier, a co-president at Barclays Capital in London.
BRITISH MINISTER DEFENDS LONDON APPROACH
British Treasury Minister Ed Balls said Britain's financial regulatory system was helping to draw business to London. Continued...
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