http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/markets/10305836/GKP-edges-closer-to-main-market.html
GKP edges closer to main market
There were more developments for followers of the oil explorer to digest.
The explorer won a key court case over the ownership of its Kurdistan assets
By Ben Martin
6:48PM BST 12 Sep 2013
There were even more developments, both positive and negative, for Gulf Keystone Petroleum investors to digest today in what had already been an eventful week for followers of the oil explorer.
The Kurdistan-focused company, currently one of the largest on the London Stock Exchange’s junior Aim market, said it had hired Deutsche Bank to help it make its move to the standard segment of the official list. The announcement came two days after the explorer, which is heavily traded by retail investors, triumphed in a key court case over the ownership of its lucrative Kurdistan assets. That win saw its shares surge.
GKP split its chairman and chief executive roles earlier this year in preparation for its long-awaited transition to the main market that it intends to complete by the end of 2013.
Once a standard main market listing is achieved, the plan is for the explorer to apply for a premium listing, which would make the group eligible for inclusion in the high–profile FTSE indices that are tracked by large institutional investors. The premium segment is subject to even more stringent regulatory requirements than the standard listing, which itself is more rigorous than Aim.
However, the long-running legal dispute over Kurdistan has served to slow GKP’s move to the premium segment of the main market. The group also had to deal with a corporate governance dispute with one of its largest shareholders during the summer.
Still, overshadowing the progress made today on its main market listing was a cut to “underweight” by HSBC’s well-followed oil and gas analyst Peter Hitchens, which helped push the shares down 6 to 206½p. He lowered his recommendation on valuation grounds in the wake of the rally experienced by GKP following its legal victory. Mr Hitchens has drawn the attention of GKP investors in the past. When he issued an “underweight” recommendation on GKP in March last year – knocking the company sharply lower – some punters said they would boycott the bank.
As well as the downgrade, there was also speculation today of a fairly large seller of the explorer who was thought to have weighed on the shares.