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Stock Loans Against Austria-Listed Equity

Institutional securities-backed lending against shares listed on Wiener Börse (Vienna Stock Exchange) — for controlling shareholders, founders, and family offices holding positions on the FMA-regulated Austria market.

01 · The Market
United Kingdom & Europe

About Wiener Börse (Vienna Stock Exchange).

Wiener Börse (Vienna Stock Exchange) is the principal cash equity venue of Austria. Established in 1771, it operates today under the regulatory oversight of the Finanzmarktaufsicht (FMA). The exchange’s principal indices are ATX, ATX Five, ATX Prime. Listing standards and continuing obligations are codified in the Vienna Stock Exchange Rules; Austrian Stock Exchange Act.

One of the oldest continuously operating exchanges in the world. A focused index with significant concentration in banking, insurance, oil and gas, and infrastructure. The Austrian disclosure regime carries a distinctive step structure that differs from most EU peers.

The exchange operates the following segments: Prime Market; Standard Market; Direct Market Plus. Each segment imposes its own listing standards and continuing obligations, which interact with the firm’s eligibility analysis for institutional positions.

02 · Eligibility
For Institutional Positions

What qualifies on Wiener Börse.

Wiener Börse is an established but selective market. Eligibility on Wiener Börse is assessed against single-stock liquidity, free float, and shareholder concentration; the firm’s threshold for institutional positions is calibrated to the market’s depth and the specific underlying.

For any specific position on Wiener Börse, the firm’s eligibility review addresses: free float and average daily trading volume relative to the contemplated pledge size; the shareholder’s status (controlling shareholder, substantial shareholder, director, or otherwise) and the resulting disclosure profile; the issuer’s sector and the segment in which it is listed; any concurrent regulatory considerations (takeover-code mechanics, foreign-ownership caps, regulated-industry restrictions); and the specific structuring requirements of the contemplated transaction (LTV, tenor, currency, recourse profile, custody arrangement).

Indicative terms for a Wiener Börse-listed position are issued only after a review of the specific position. A published rate sheet is not used; the discipline of the structuring is itself the value.

03 · Disclosure
FMA Reference

Framework cited on Wiener Börse.

The principal regulatory reference on Wiener Börse is Stock Exchange Act Section 130. Operational mechanics, reporting levels, step thresholds, and per-transaction interpretation are governed by the underlying rules and the relevant national-law overlays. These are mapped against any contemplated transaction at the structuring stage in coordination with the borrower’s chosen counsel.

For controlling shareholders, directors, and other regulated holders, additional regimes apply on Wiener Börse — including the takeover-code mechanics of the Austria market, insider-dealing rules under the FMA framework, and listing-rule restrictions on dealings during defined windows. The disclosure footprint of any contemplated transaction is mapped at the structuring stage; sequencing, language, and concurrent regulatory communications are managed accordingly.

References above are public regulatory citations published for information only. They are not legal advice. The primary sources — the Vienna Stock Exchange Rules; Austrian Stock Exchange Act, the Finanzmarktaufsicht (FMA) rulebook, and applicable statutory instruments — should be consulted directly. Each enquirer should obtain independent legal advice in the relevant jurisdiction for any specific transaction.

04 · Process
From Enquiry to Funding

The route to a Wiener Börse stock loan.

The firm’s engagement model is consistent across markets: five disciplined stages from confidential enquiry to capital deployment, with senior principals throughout. For Wiener Börse-listed positions, the structuring stage addresses the market-specific factors above — settlement under the Wiener Börse conventions, custody arrangements with an Austria-qualified custodian, EUR-denominated and cross-currency options, and disclosure timing under the FMA regime.

See the full process →

05 · FAQ
Wiener Börse-Specific Questions

What people most often ask about Wiener Börse.

Q · 01 What is the typical loan-to-value for a stock loan against Wiener Börse-listed positions?
LTV on Wiener Börse is calibrated to the specific position. The principal drivers are the underlying’s free float, average daily trading volume, volatility, and the borrower’s regulatory profile. For a large-cap, high-volume Wiener Börse name, LTV is materially higher than for a thinly-traded or recently-listed position. A non-recourse structure runs at lower LTV than a full-recourse structure on the same underlying. Indicative ratios are issued only after a review of the specific Wiener Börse position; there is no published rate sheet.
Q · 02 Which Wiener Börse-listed segments are eligible for stock loans?
Eligibility is assessed case by case. The firm considers positions across the segments operated by Wiener Börse (Vienna Stock Exchange): Prime Market; Standard Market; Direct Market Plus. Higher-tier (premium / large-cap / main-market) segments are typically more straightforward to structure than growth / SME segments, principally because of free-float and liquidity differences.
Q · 03 In which currency can a Wiener Börse stock loan be denominated?
The default is EUR, the listing currency. Cross-currency structures, for example, financing an EUR-denominated Wiener Börse position with a USD or EUR loan, are common and routinely available. The cross-currency element introduces hedging, settlement, and tax considerations that are addressed in the documentation.
Q · 04 Are there foreign-ownership constraints on Wiener Börse-listed shares relevant to a pledge?
Foreign-ownership rules vary by issuer and by sector on Wiener Börse; regulated sectors (banking, telecoms, defence, natural resources, and others) commonly carry ownership caps and notification requirements that interact with collateralised structures. The firm’s structuring review addresses these expressly for any specific position.
06 · Other United Kingdom & Europe
Adjacent Markets

Countries adjacent to Austria.

United Kingdom · Europe (Euronext) · Germany · Switzerland · Italy · Spain · Sweden · Finland · Denmark · Poland

All countries →

A specific Austria position to discuss?

Submit a confidential enquiry. A senior principal will respond within one business day.