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Euronext Group
Euronext traces its modern structure to the merger of the Amsterdam, Brussels, and Paris exchanges in 2000, with later additions including the Lisbon...
Euronext Group
Euronext traces its modern structure to the merger of the Amsterdam, Brussels, and Paris exchanges in 2000, with later additions including the Lisbon exchange (2002), the Irish Stock Exchange (2018), Oslo Børs (2019), and Borsa Italiana (2021). The group is headquartered in Amsterdam and operates regulated exchanges in eight cities across Europe, supported by a federal model that preserves local market autonomy while unifying technology and operations. The firm's business spans the full capital markets value chain: listing and trading in cash equities, ETFs, fixed income, and derivatives; plus post-trade services including clearing, settlement, and custody. Euronext reported that in 2026 it hosted 24 new listings by late May, a pace that included the listing of Constellation Oil Services Holding on Euronext Oslo Børs (May 2026) and PPI Public Property Invest on Euronext Oslo Børs (May 2026). The group's strategic plan, Innovate for Growth 2027, prioritizes expansion in fixed income and power market trading and clearing, alongside leadership in cash equities and ETFs. Euronext serves clients across 22 countries and employs a team that operates from offices in Amsterdam, Athens, Brussels, Dublin, Lisbon, Milan, Oslo, and Paris. The group has not disclosed AUM or total professionals publicly. In May 2026, Euronext announced the listing of Borr Drilling on Euronext Oslo Børs with a market capitalization of approximately NOK 18 billion (per Euronext, May 2026). The group's structural differentiator is its federal model: eight regulated exchanges unified under a single shareholder structure yet retaining local regulatory and market identities. This balance lets Euronext achieve scale and cross-border integration while maintaining the relationships and market practices that each local ecosystem requires — an architecture distinct from a centralized full-merger model or a loose federation of independent exchanges.
General information
Firm type
Other
Year founded
—
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
Europe
Country
Netherlands
City
Amsterdam
Corporate office
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Frequently asked questions
What is Euronext's relationship to the legacy national stock exchanges it operates?
Euronext uses a federal model: each of the eight regulated exchanges (Amsterdam, Athens, Brussels, Dublin, Lisbon, Milan, Oslo, Paris) retains its own regulatory identity and local market practices, while sharing a unified technology platform, clearing infrastructure, and corporate ownership under Euronext N.V. (per Euronext, 2025).
Does Euronext only operate stock exchanges, or does it provide other financial services?
Euronext covers the full capital markets value chain, including listing primary markets, secondary trading across multiple asset classes (cash equities, ETFs, fixed income, derivatives), and post-trade services such as clearing (through Euronext Clearing), settlement, and custody (per Euronext, 2025).
What is the Innovate for Growth 2027 strategic plan?
Innovate for Growth 2027 is Euronext's strategic roadmap announced in 2023. It focuses on three pillars: accelerating growth in non-volume businesses (such as data and technology services), expanding the fixed income, currencies, and commodities (FICC) trading and clearing franchise, and building upon Euronext's leadership in cash equities and ETFs (per Euronext, 2023).
Which asset classes does Euronext support for trading?
Euronext operates a multi-asset platform that covers cash equities, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), fixed income securities (bonds), derivatives (futures and options), and recently expanded into power market trading and clearing (per Euronext, 2025).
How has Euronext grown its exchange network since 2000?
Euronext was created in 2000 through the merger of the Amsterdam, Brussels, and Paris exchanges. It subsequently integrated the Lisbon exchange (2002), the Irish Stock Exchange (2018), Oslo Børs (2019), and Borsa Italiana (2021) — bringing the total to eight regulated exchanges (per Euronext, 2025).
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