* IG says Q1 adj. revenue falls 4%
* Active clients stood at 287,200 at Q1-end
* Company maintains medium-term targets
* Shares up 5% in early trade
(Adds details, background, share move)
Sept 16 (Reuters) - The number of new clients signing up to
trade on IG's platforms dropped by 37% over the past
three months, the London-based firm said, while revenues also
eased from levels seen last year when the pandemic caused
extreme volatility.
The midcap company brought in 27,500 clients in June-August,
its fiscal first quarter, compared to 34,600 a year earlier when
it saw strong growth as people stuck at home due to pandemic
lockdowns tried their luck on the stock market. The number of
new traders in June-August last year was more than double the
number seen in the same quarter of 2019.
IG, created by spread-betting pioneer Stuart Wheeler in 1974
to let people bet on the price of gold, has 287,200 active
clients including those from its recently-acquired U.S. rival
tastytrade.
Shares in IG, which have underperformed the wider index
this year, were up 5% by 0723 GMT as the company
maintained its medium-term targets, unlike rival CMC
which cut its profit outlook by up to 80 million pounds
($110.64 million) earlier this month.
IG said its adjusted net trading revenue in June-August,
excluding a foreign exchange hedging gain linked to the
tastytrade purchase, dropped 4% to 200.9 million pounds.
Financial markets, which saw volatility levels peak in early
2020 when the coronavirus crisis took hold, have settled down
this year as vaccination drives and government stimulus steps
have calmed investor nerves.
The GameStonk retail trading frenzy on Wall Street, where
amateur traders liaised on social media platforms such as
Redditt to discuss strategies and invest in beaten-down stocks,
has also begun to lose momentum.
The CBOE volatility index, often dubbed Wall Street's
fear gauge, has come down to 18 from a peak of 85 last year.
($1 = 0.7231 pounds)
(Reporting by Muvija M and Chris Peters in Bengaluru; Editing
by Rashmi Aich and Susan Fenton)