Expanding and deepening capital markets has become a central issue in European debate in recent years. Substantial investment needs coupled with an increased focus in the EU on strengthening international competitiveness have led to renewed awareness about the importance of being able to mobilise long-term, risk-willing capital for high-growth sectors. This has given the development of strong equity markets in particular more prominence in political debate, exposing the limited ability of a primarily bank-based funding model to provide sufficient financing to what are often low-collateral businesses.
Sweden has garnered much attention in this regard. The Swedish equity markets, both public and private, are among the largest in the EU even in absolute terms. Domestic investment in these markets is widespread, ranging from institutional investors to households. Identifying the underlying drivers, as well as possible areas of improvement, can serve as a foundation for formulating a set of policies that help advance capital market development.
This report provides a comprehensive empirical overview of the Swedish equity market landscape and presents an initial assessment of elements that have shaped its development. This assessment, presented in chapter 1, identifies six key areas: a widespread equity culture strengthened by active government policies; a substantial domestic institutional investor base, notably a large asset-backed pension system; policy efforts to promote household investment through both fiscal and non-fiscal incentives; a well-functioning market infrastructure and funding ladder; a flexible regulatory structure; and active ownership engagement, linked to a corporate governance model that focuses heavily on shareholder control. It serves as a first step to inform a longer-term project that will look at specific policy initiatives in greater detail. It is informed by empirical findings (chapter 2), presented below.