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Little Brother's Big Secrets

Valued at 拢80bn, the UK's junior stock market is touted as the most successful growth market in the world - but is it doing enough to tackle fraud and mismanagement?

Valued at 拢80 billion, the UK's junior stock market is hyped as the most successful growth market in the world.

Government incentives - including stamp duty and inheritance tax breaks - mean that more ordinary UK investors are opting for the Alternative Investment Market (AIM).

Set up in 1995 to allow smaller companies to raise funds, AIM is a less-regulated alternative to its big brother, the main London Stock Exchange.

But it is no stranger to controversy.

Once labelled a "casino" by a senior US regulator due to its lax regulation, the market has been hit by a series of recent high profile scandals.

File on Four asks if this light-touch regulation poses a hidden risk for shareholders and if unscrupulous businesses are exploiting AIM to rip off ordinary British investors?

Producer: Alys Harte
Reporter: Simon Cox.

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38 minutes

Last on

Sun 2 Oct 2016 17:00

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Valued at 拢80bn, the UK's junior stock market is touted as the most successful growth market in the world - but is it doing enough to tackle fraud and mismanagement?

Broadcasts

  • Tue 27 Sep 2016 20:00
  • Sun 2 Oct 2016 17:00

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