What we do
Formed from the merger of Panmure Gordon and Liberum in May 2024, Panmure Liberum is the largest adviser to UK-quoted companies with market-leading teams in Investment Banking, Research, Sales and Execution.
The merger brings together our combined entrepreneurialism, deep and broad sector knowledge, and shared ambitions to establish a market leader in UK Investment Banking.
Our latest combined transaction successes




Reforming ISAs would help savers and boost investment in UK firms
Feb 2025
By Simon French, Chief Economist and Head of Research
In recent weeks there has been renewed focus on the future of Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs). This was triggered initially by Exchequer Secretary, Emma Reynolds, suggesting to a House of Lords Committee that taxpayer support for cash savings has “failed to drive an investment culture” in the UK.

This ‘iron chancellor’ is at the mercy of external events
Feb 2025
By Simon French, Chief Economist and Head of Research
Last week saw two important milestones for the UK public finances. The first was an updated Bank of England forecast downgrading the UK growth outlook. The second was the latest assessment from the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) on the government’s progress against its self-imposed fiscal rules. Whilst the Bank of England’s workings were made public enabling a post-mortem of its decision to cut interest rates, the OBR’s document was, as convention dictates, a private missive to Chancellor Rachel Reeves. In doing so, the OBR provided Reeves with her first official guide as to whether she needs to stick, or twist, following her October Budget. Speculation is rife that the Chancellor will need to twist. A range of external economic forecasters have suggested that higher borrowing costs on global markets, the slowdown in consumer and business sentiment, and higher energy costs will combine to eliminate the modest headroom Chancellor Reeves left herself in the Autumn.

How Trump’s economic policies could affect UK interest rates
Jan 2025
In his recent address to the World Economic Forum in Davos, President Trump was unequivocal. “I'll demand that interest rates drop immediately. And likewise, they should be dropping all over the world”. These two sentences moved bond market interest rates further off their pre-Inauguration highs. The US President’s lack of nuance is perhaps his greatest communication gift. For central bankers skilled in conditional linguistics this is quite the culture clash. Trump parked his hulking snowplough on the manicured piste of the world’s central banks. It looks like this piece of heavy machinery is unlikely to shift for four years. For a man who made his name in highly-leveraged real estate deals, Trump’s preference for cheaper money and lower interest rates appears inevitable.

Panmure Liberum acts as Nominated Adviser and Sole Bookrunner on One Health Group’s £7.4 million Placing and proposed Admission to AIM
Feb 2025 News