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Factbox-Global companies delay IPOs and slash dividends as Middle East conflict rattles markets

By Thomson Reuters Apr 2, 2026 | 6:54 AM

April 2 (Reuters) – The Middle East conflict has significantly impacted global financial markets, affected logistics and hindered the supply of raw materials integral to a ​host of industries.

Below is a list of some ‌of the companies reacting to the crisis by postponing their initial public offerings or withdrawing their dividend proposals, in alphabetical order:

DOMETIC GROUP

The Swedish outdoor tech firm pulled its dividend proposal of SEK 1.00 ($0.11) per ‌share, ​instead proposing no dividend for 2025. ⁠It said geopolitical developments ⁠had increased economic uncertainty and that there were signs of demand and trading conditions turning somewhat weaker than anticipated.

LOVEHOLIDAYS

Online travel agent Loveholidays is preparing to delay an ​up to 1 billion pound ($1.3 billion) London IPO due to the conflict affecting market sentiment and causing travel ⁠chaos, a source familiar with the ⁠matter told Reuters.

MCCOY GLOBAL

The Canadian well construction ​automation company said it would suspend its quarterly dividend to ​maintain financial flexibility in the face of the conflict ‌in the Middle East, which it said had introduced uncertainty and was affecting logistics and delivery schedules.

PHONEPE

The Walmart-backed Indian fintech firm said it had paused its plans for ⁠an IPO after geopolitical tensions caused volatility in global capital markets. It said it would resume the process once the market ⁠was stable again.

XED ‌EXECUTIVE DEVELOPMENT

The executive education platform, the first ⁠company from India’s low-tax GIFT City to ​launch an ‌initial public offering, said it had withdrawn ​its IPO ⁠amid weak market sentiments due to the conflict in the Middle East and delays in completing mandatory video-based customer verification for non-resident Indians and foreign investors linked to the conflict.

($1 = 0.7583 pounds)

($1 = 9.4984 Swedish crowns)

(Reporting by Bernadette Hogg; Editing ​by Matt Scuffham)