Commodities: Oil slips below $96
Crude
oil prices snapped a four-day winning streak on Monday, mirroring weak
stock markets, and concern that slowing global growth will curb demand
for oil.
Crude oil for September delivery declined 4 cents to
settle at $95.97 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Trading
was thinner than usual on Monday ahead of the expiry of the Nymex
September contract on Tuesday. Otherwise oil prices have risen over 3%
in the last four sessions.
On the ICE futures exchange October
Brent crude eased one cent to settle at $113.70 a barrel after spending
most of the session dipping in and out of losses.
Stock
markets in Europe turned lower after the European Central Bank said
reports that it was considering capping bond yields for debt struck
economies was "absolutely misleading."
The Eurozone monetary
authority added that, "it would be wrong to speculate on the future
shape of any interventions." The comments follow a weekend article in
German weekly Der Spiegel which said the Eurozone´s monetary authority
may set "caps" on the sovereign debt yields of Spain and Italy.
Oil buyers also turned cautious amid speculation over a US Strategic
Petroleum Reserve release and following reports of an increase in Saudi
Arabian production.
Among precious metals gold futures settled
0.2% higher on Monday to the strongest close since mid June while
platinum prices scored a third day of consecutive gains.
Gold prices remained within a tight range in a day short of any major headlines from Europe or the US.
Gold futures for December delivery rose $3.60 to settle at $1,623 an
ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
| UK Event Calendar |
Tuesday August 21
INTERIMS
Afren,
Capital Drilling Ltd. (DI), Coca-Cola HBC S.A., CPP Group, Fisher
(James) & Sons, Gem Diamonds Ltd. (DI), Glencore International,
H&T Group, Persimmon, Severfield-Rowen, Source BioScience, UK
Commercial Property Trust, Wood Group (John)
Q2
ADC African Development Corporation GmbH
GMS
ILX Group
ANNUAL REPORT
Falkland Islands Holdings
AGMS
Falkland Islands Holdings, Goldman Sachs Dynamic Opportunities Ltd, World Trust Fund
UK ECONOMIC ANNOUNCEMENTS
CBI Industrial Trends Surveys (11:00)
Public Sector Finances (09:30)
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| Europe Market Report |
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| FTSE 100 | Euronext | Dax perf | CAC 40 |
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European stock futures suggest a higher opening on Tuesday despite uncertainty over future action by the European Central Bank.
The ECB said yesterday that speculation about plans to set up a cap on
borrowing costs of crisis-hit countries is misleading, as the decisions
concerning bond buying have not yet been discussed by the ECB's governing council.
Asian stocks are rising broadly, with Chinese shares
up 0.3 percent after the People's Bank of China injected 220 billion
yuan ($34.6 billion) into the banking system via reverse-repurchase
operations, with an aim to improve liquidity and bolster a slowing
economy. China's key money-market rates edged higher as today's
relatively large cash injection, the most in a single day, doused hopes
of a cut in banks' reserve ratio in the near term.
Key benchmark indexes in Australia, Japan and South Korea are posting modest gains, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index is down 0.4 percent.
The euro is holding steady against the dollar and yen ahead of a crucial week of meetings with eurozone leaders which could determine Greece's future and the stability of the 17 countries that use the euro.
German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle stressed yesterday that his country wants Greece to
continue implementing reforms and tough cost-cutting measures it had
earlier agreed while availing two massive international bailout loans
for avoiding bankruptcy.
Speaking to reporters after talks with
his Greek counterpart, Dimitris Avramopoulos, in Berlin, Westerwelle
stressed that "a substantial softening of the agreements and the agreed
reforms is not possible from the German government's point of view." The
German foreign minister also noted that a final decision regarding
policy changes should be taken only after the 'troika' of creditors,
comprising the IMF, EU and ECB, release their report on Greece next
month.
On the macroeconomic front, investors await public sector
finance data from the U.K. and the outcome of a short-term debt auction
in Spain for further directional cues. Across the Atlantic, reports on
existing home sales and new home sales due this week will provide some clues about whether the Fed would ease its policy in September.
In domestic corporate news, Swiss private-banking group Julius Baer Group
said that it would limit its proposed rights offering to 500 million
Swiss francs as part of its capital raise to fund its acquisition of Bank of America Corp.'s non-US wealth management unit.
European
stocks fell modestly on Monday after Germany's Bundesbank reiterated
its opposition to the European Central Bank's plan to purchase more
government bonds, warning that the decision to share solvency risks
should be taken by governments, and not by central banks.
The Euro Stoxx 50 index of eurozone bluechip stocks slid 0.2 percent and the Stoxx Europe 50 index,
which includes some major U.K. companies, lost 0.4 percent, while the
major averages around Europe fell between 0.1 percent and 0.5 percent.
U.S.
stocks ended almost unchanged overnight, with a lack of fresh
directional cues amid little major corporate and economic news
contributing to the lackluster performance. The Dow dipped 3.56 points, the tech-heavy Nasdaq edged down 0.38 points and the S&P 500 inched down 0.03 points.
| US Market Report |
US close: Stocks flat with the focus on Europe
Market Movers: Dow Jones: 13,272 (-0.03%) Nasdaq: 3,076 (-0.01%) S&P 500: 1,418 (0.00%)
US stocks started the week on a dull note, finishing flat on the back of fading optimism surrounding the Eurozone.
Both the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 registered
their sixth straight weekly gain last week, while the Nasdaq rose for
the fifth consecutive week.
Germany's Bundesbank reiterated
its opposition to the European Central Bank's (ECB's) intervention in
the bond markets today, saying that such an act coms with "considerable
risks for stability". It said: "Decisions about a possibly even broader
mutualisation of solvency risks should be anchored in financial policy,
meaning with the governments and parliaments, and should not occur via
central bank balances."
Markets were also reacting to reports
that the ECB is considering setting caps on bond spreads in southern
Europe in order to help keep a lid on periphery country borrowing costs.
Meanwhile investors were looking ahead to minutes of the
latest Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) due out on Wednesday.
Economic data since the meeting on August 1st has dampened hopes of
further quantitative easing by the Fed.
Coventry surges after Aetna deal
Coventry Health Care surged 20% after Aetna
agreed to buy the medical-care provider for $5.7bn in a cash and stock
deal. Aetna gained over 5% after the announcement with its Chief
Executive Officer Mark Bertolini saying: "Integrating Coventry into
Aetna will complement our strategy to expand our core insurance
business, increase our presence in the fast-growing government sector
and expand our relationships with providers in local geographies."
Electronics retailer Best Buy
dropped over 10% after announcing that negotiations with its ex-Chief
Executive Officer, Richard Schulze, have fallen through. This after the
company's board signalled that it might not accept his buy-out offer.
US home improvement chain Lowe's
slipped after reporting that profits fell by 10% in its fiscal second
quarter, disappointing analysts who had pencilled in a slight rise. The
firm also lowered its full-year earnings guidance.
Sirius gained after Liberty Media
said that it plans to take control of the satellite-radio broadcaster
and that this is now easier as it controls over 50% of its stock.
Kinder Morgan
is to sell $3.3bn in energy pipeline and infrastructure assets in the
Rocky Mountains to Tallgrass Energy Partners, including debt.
S&P 500 - Risers Coventry Health Care Inc. (CVH) $42.04 +20.32%
First Solar Inc. (FSLR) $22.46 +5.64%
Aetna Inc. (AET) $40.18 +5.63%
GameStop Corp. (GME) $19.49 +4.95%
Southwest Airlines Co. (LUV) $9.44 +3.40%
CONSOL Energy Inc. (CNX) $33.06 +3.38%
NRG Energy Inc. (NRG) $22.26 +3.34%
Valero Energy Corp. (VLO) $29.75 +3.30%
Citigroup Inc. (C) $29.98 +3.27%
Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) $20.09 +2.92%
S&P 500 - Fallers Best Buy Co. Inc. (BBY) $18.16 -10.41%
Lowe's Companies Inc. (LOW) $26.26 -5.78%
Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD) $57.32 -3.65%
D. R. Horton Inc. (DHI) $18.41 -3.00%
Beam Inc. Common Stock (BEAM) $58.41 -2.97%
Waste Management Inc. (WM) $34.60 -2.97%
Autodesk Inc. (ADSK) $33.96 -2.89%
PulteGroup Inc. (PHM) $13.01 -2.77%
Lennar Corp. Class A (LEN) $31.88 -2.63%
JDS Uniphase Corp. (JDSU) $11.71 -2.50%
Dow Jones I.A - Risers Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ) $20.09 +2.92%
Bank of America Corp. (BAC) $8.15 +1.88%
JP Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM) $37.37 +1.05%
Merck & Co. Inc. (MRK) $43.75 +0.95%
McDonald's Corp. (MCD) $88.17 +0.93%
Travelers Company Inc. (TRV) $65.64 +0.78%
Kraft Foods Inc. (KFT) $40.77 +0.67%
Alcoa Inc. (AA) $8.80 +0.57%
Pfizer Inc. (PFE) $23.91 +0.50%
Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) $90.44 +0.48%
Dow Jones I.A - Fallers American Express Co. (AXP) $56.90 -1.20%
Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) $43.70 -0.82%
AT&T Inc. (T) $36.89 -0.75%
Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO) $18.94 -0.63%
Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) $30.74 -0.52%
Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) $87.95 -0.51%
Intel Corp. (INTC) $26.23 -0.38%
Procter & Gamble Co. (PG) $66.75 -0.37%
3M Co. (MMM) $93.89 -0.37%
United Technologies Corp. (UTX) $80.08 -0.36%
Nasdaq 100 - Risers Dell Inc. (DELL) $12.56 +2.78%
Apple Inc. (AAPL) $665.15 +2.63%
Celgene Corp. (CELG) $70.81 +2.46%
Garmin Ltd. (GRMN) $41.84 +1.60%
Perrigo Company (PRGO) $108.64 +1.60%
Expedia Inc. (EXPE) $52.44 +1.59%
Warner Chilcott Plc (WCRX) $17.20 +1.24%
Mylan Inc. (MYL) $23.88 +1.06%
Netflix Inc. (NFLX) $64.24 +0.86%
Wynn Resorts Ltd. (WYNN) $105.60 +0.76%
Nasdaq 100 - Fallers Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD) $57.32 -3.65%
Autodesk Inc. (ADSK) $33.96 -2.89%
Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. (GMCR) $24.34 -2.44%
Avago Technologies Ltd. (AVGO) $35.96 -2.39%
Baidu Inc. (BIDU) $130.91 -2.29%
Cerner Corp. (CERN) $71.11 -2.00%
Microchip Technology Inc. (MCHP) $35.07 -1.85%
F5 Networks Inc. (FFIV) $101.68 -1.82%
O'Reilly Automotive Inc. (ORLY) $86.49 -1.70%
Maxim Integrated Products Inc. (MXIM) $28.31 -1.70% |
| Newspaper Round Up |
Tuesday newspaper round-up: ECB, Rank, Everything Everywhere
The
Daily Telegraph reports today that it can confirm reports in Der
Spiegel that European Central Bank (ECB) technicians are examining plans
to cap Spanish and Italian bond yields, among other options. This may
prove to be the "game changer" that critics around the world have been
demanding for two years, the newspaper adds. The ECB's director-general
of market operations, Ulrich Bindseil, is spearheading the plans in
talks with experts from the ECB's family of national central banks.
Market, monetary policy and risk management committees are working to
put together a draft. "They don't take sides. They just lay out the pros
and cons and leave it to the governing council to decide," said one EU
diplomat who was cited.
Billionaire George Soros has taken a 7.85% stake in Manchester United,
betting on the UK football team to score in the financial markets as
well as on the pitch. News of the investment, made via Soros Fund
Management, was released in an SEC filing after the closing bell rang on
Wall Street today. The 82-year-old now owns 3,114,588 shares in the
team but carries almost no voting power and will receive no dividend,
thanks to the structure of the club's flotation. Manchester United
floated 16.7m shares in New York at $14 each on August 10, giving it a
total valuation of $2.3bn and making it the most valuable team in the
world. Its main contender for the title, Real Madrid, is worth just
$1.88bn, The Telegraph says.
A multimillion-pound deal to
create Britain's biggest chain of casinos was hanging by a thread last
night after the Office of Fair Trading unexpectedly referred the merger
to the Competition Commission. The regulator said that it was concerned
that the proposed acquisition by Rank Group of Gala Casinos would
"substantially reduce competition in the casino sector" and could
"result in a worse deal for consumers". Rank, which had announced the
deal in May, said that it was "considering the implications of this
decision", adding: "A further announcement will be made in due course."
Carl Leaver, the chief executive of Gala Coral Group, which also owns
betting shops and bingo clubs, said that he was "surprised" by the
decision. "Once we get the full report, we will sit down with our legal
advisors and decide on the next step," he said, according to The Times.
Apple
yesterday became the most valuable public company in history. The share
price of the technology firm rocketed to £423.33 in frenzied trading,
taking the total value of its shares to £395bn. Apple was already the
No.1 on companies' current value, a position it has held since
dethroning oil giant Exxon Mobil last August. But a doubling of its
market capitalisation value in just 17 months means it has now knocked
its rival technology firm Microsoft from the all-time top spot. The
surge in share price has been driven by the impending arrival of Apple's
latest gadget, the fifth-generation iPhone, which is expected to go on
sale in the UK in October. Previous generations of the smartphone have
been a major success for the firm. Speculation that Apple is gearing up
to launch a cut-price iPad tablet computer has also boosted the share
price. Until yesterday Bill Gates's Microsoft had held the title of the
all-time most valuable publicly traded company since December 1999, the
peak of the 'dotcom bubble', when its market capitalisation flirted with
the £394bn mark, the Daily Mail writes.
Online spending
grew at its fastest rate this year in July, even as the high street
endured a tough month. Strong sales of fashion accessories and
electronic goods helped to lift internet sales by 17% to £6.5bn,
according to the IMRG Capgemini e-Retail Sales Index. Sales made over
mobile devices rose more than four-fold against last year. The weakest
categories were lingerie, with sales down 2% year-on-year, and beer,
wines and spirits, which were flat compared with last year and 11 per
cent down on June. Chris Webster, of Capgemini, said: "The excitement
and build up to the Olympic Games certainly contributed to July's strong
performance." Online-only players outperformed the online operations of
traditional retailers for the seventh month in a row, with growth of
19.5% and 15% respectively. Travel sales rose by 12%, with the average
purchase value rising 24% to £1,050, The Times reports.
Barnes & Noble,
the world's largest books chain, will take on Amazon and Apple with the
launch of its digital book device in Britain. The American retail giant
said yesterday that it will release the Nook e-reader in Britain in
mid-October, with 2.5m titles available to buy. The library is larger
than Amazon's Kindle store, which has "more than a million" titles for
download. The move is likely to create a fierce battle in the market for
e-books in this country, which is dominated by Amazon. Devices such as
the Sony Reader and WH Smith's Kobo have failed to take off. The Nook,
which is the second-bestselling digital books device in the US, is
likely to provide tougher competition than previous challengers.
Microsoft recently bought a $605m stake in the Nook business, giving
Barnes & Noble the financial firepower to expand, according to The
Times.
Everything Everywhere is in advanced discussions
to sell part of its crucial spectrum holdings capable of carrying next
generation 4G mobile services to Three, the rival network owned by
Hutchison Whampoa. The mobile phone operator formed by the merger of
Orange and T-Mobile two years ago has been forced to sell the spectrum
by European competition authorities. The deal would give Three
guaranteed ownership of rare spectrum that can carry superfast 4G mobile
broadband, and potentially at a lower price than bidding against its
three rivals in the much delayed auction of lower frequency 4G spectrum
pencilled for the end of the year by Ofcom, the telecoms regulator.
Morgan Stanley is advising on the sale, which has also interested
Vodafone and O2. All parties declined to comment, The Financial Times
says.
The grocery giant Tesco is facing a hefty fine
after a dawn raid by the UK Border Agency found it had been employing
foreign students illegally. Immigration officials have arrested 20
people at the supermarket's dotcom warehouse in south London for working
substantially longer than they were allowed. In full co-operation with
Tesco, UKBA officers conducted the raid at 3am on 21 July at the
grocer's facility in Croydon, which delivers online orders from
Tesco.com. The investigation follows a renewed effort by the Government
to clamp down on "visa abuse", which has seen more than 2,000 offenders
removed since the beginning of May, The Independent reports.
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