London open: Global concerns dent stocks early on
Market Movers
- techMARK 2,099.54 -0.22%
- FTSE 100 5,758.80 -0.31%
- FTSE 250 11,413.06 -0.31%
- Japanese concerns weigh on sentiment early on
- G4S slips after first-half results, job cuts
- Kingfisher lower after broker downgrade.
The FTSE 100 slipped on Tuesday morning following a long weekend on
concerns over the Japanese economy and uncertainty in the Eurozone.
"Another big factor in the fall [for the Footsie] is the increasing expectation that Ben Bernanke
won't announce another round of quantitative easing at his speech at
Jackson Hole on Friday and we could possibly see things pull back
further over day as optimism turns quickly to doubt as we have seen all
too often since 2008," said sales trader Matthew Nelson from Spreadex.
The Japanese government
reduced its view on personal consumption, housing construction,
exports, imports and industrial output for the first 10 months of the
year. "The Japanese economy is on the way to recovery at a moderate
pace, partly due to reconstruction demand, while some weak movements are
seen recently," the Cabinet Office said in its monthly report.
JPMorgan Securities Japan and BNP Paribas are forecasting a 0.3% and
0.9% decline in third-quarter Japanese gross domestic product (GDP),
respectively.
Spanish GDP declined at a 1.3% annual rate in the second quarter, compared with the initial estimate of a 1% contraction.
Meanwhile, European Central Bank
(ECB) member Jörg Asmussen said that the EFSF bailout fund must take
the lead in the purchase of any sovereign debt before the ECB steps in.
"The ECB council will continue to decide in full independence whether,
when and how it will purchase bonds on the secondary market," he said.
G4S slips after revealing Olympics costs and job cuts
Security giant G4S
fell after expressing disappointment over the problems related to its
Olympics contract, saying that it will incur a £50m loss on the contract
in the first half. Meanwhile, the company said that a restructuring of
its overhead structure will lead the loss of 1,100 jobs. Nevertheless,
the firm revealed that turnover at constant exchange rates rose 7.5%
while profits were flat.
Miners were firmly out of favour this morning on concerns over the Japanese economy. BHP Billiton fell after announcing the sale of its Yeelirrie uranium deposit in Western Australia to Cameco for $430m. BHP and sector peers ENRC, Kazakhmys and Vedanta were also lower after Morgan Stanley reduced its target for all four stocks.
Glencore
fell after saying that China is going to take longer than expected over
its review of its acquisition of agriculture business Viterra.
B&Q owner Kingfisher was a heavy faller after Bank of America Merrill Lunch downgraded its rating on the stock to 'underperform'.
Drugs giant AstraZeneca
was flat after saying that it has appointed Roche's Chief Operating
Officer as its new Chief Executive Officer. Meanwhile, the firm also
announced that the European Commission has granted marketing
authorisation to its ZINFORO treatment.
Bunzl, the
international distribution and outsourcing group, fell despite saying
that pre-tax profits and revenues in the first half rose 9% and 7%,
respectively.
UK Event Calendar |
Tuesday August 28
INTERIMS
Bouygues
SA, Bunzl, Eurasia Drilling Co Ltd GDR (Reg S), FBD Holdings, G4S,
Inspired Energy, Lamprell, OJSC Magnitogorsk Iron & Steel Works GDR
(Reg S), Regus, UTV Media, Yule Catto & Co
INTERIM DIVIDEND PAYMENT DATE
Dewhurst, Dewhurst (Non-Voting)
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ANNOUNCEMENTS
Balance of Payments (GER) (07:00)
Consumer Confidence (US) (15:00)
M3 Money Supply (EU) (09:00)
Q2
OJSC Magnitogorsk Iron & Steel Works GDR (Reg S)
AGMS
Advanced
Computer Software Group, Development Securities, Livermore Investments
Group Ltd., Omega Diagnostics Group, Pinewood Shepperton, Vedanta
Resources
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FTSE 100 | Euronext | Dax perf | CAC 40 |
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European stocks are seen opening lower on Tuesday amid skepticism about the long-term effectiveness of any possible Fed or ECB intervention to bolster growth and help ease the euro zone debt crisis. U.S. Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke addresses the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank's
annual symposium on Friday, while ECB President Mario Draghi is also
expected to speak at the crucial meet on Saturday.
With the ECB ready to resume bond buying,
executive board member Jorg Asmussen said during a speech in Hamburg
that the central bank would decide "in full independence" how and when
it would intervene in the secondary debt markets to help struggling
economies like Spain and Italy reduce their borrowing costs.
In
bond auctions, Italy will sell up to 3.75 billion euros of zero-coupon
and inflation-linked bonds today, while the Spanish Treasury hopes to
sell up to 3.5 billion euros of short-term bonds.
Spanish Prime
Minister Mariano Rajoy will hold talks with European Council President
Herman Van Rompuy later in the day and meet with French President
Francois Hollande later this week, increasing speculation about whether
Spain would seek a sovereign bailout.
Asian markets are turning
in a mixed performance on global growth worries after the Japanese
government cut its economic forecast for the first time since October,
citing "some weak movements" such as stumbling export growth amid global
economic uncertainties.
In economic releases, unemployment in France rose
at the sharpest pace in nearly three years in July to just below the
3-million mark, the latest figures from the labor ministry showed. The
number of registered job seekers in the second-biggest eurozone economy
increased for a fifteenth consecutive month in July to reach 2.987
million. This marked an increase of 1.4 percent or 41,300 job seekers
from June. Annually, the unemployment rose 8.5 percent.
In corporate news, Canadian grain handler Viterra Inc.
provided an update regarding the status of regulatory approvals of the
proposed acquisition of Viterra by commodity trader Glencore
International Plc.
Ipsen's first-half 2012 consolidated
net profit attributable to the company's shareholders decreased slightly
to 90.2 million euros from 91.7 million euros last year.
French lender Credit Agricole SA reported
a decline in second-quarter net income mainly due to losses at its
Greek unit, impairment of Intesa Sanpaolo shares as well as lower
revenues.
Anglo-Swedish drug maker AstraZeneca Plc said it
has appointed Pascal Soriot as its chief executive officer, while Simon
Lowth would remain as the company's interim chief executive until
Soriot joins.
European stocks closed in positive territory on
Monday after Charles Evans, president of the Chicago Federal Reserve,
spoke of the need for another round of Fed action to bring down the
jobless rate in the world's largest economy.
The Euro Stoxx 50
index of Eurozone bluechip stocks gained 1.1 percent and the Stoxx
Europe 50 index, which includes some major U.K. companies, ended 0.4
percent higher. Around Europe, Switzerland's SMI, France's CAC 40 and the German DAX rose between 0.2 percent and 1.1 percent, while the U.K. market was closed for a banking holiday.
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Newspaper Round Up |
Tuesday newspaper round-up: Unilever, Small businesses, Lonmin
Unilever,
the company behind Persil, PG Tips and Flora said it will apply lessons
from its Asian business as consumers change their shopping habits amid a
financial crisis that has left Greece mired in recession for the past
five years and Spain with the highest unemployment rate in the
industrialised world. "Poverty is returning to Europe," Jan Zijderveld,
the head of Unilever's European business told the Financial Times
Deutschland in an interview. "If a consumer in Spain only spends 17
euros when they go shopping, then I'm not going to be able to sell them
washing powder for half of their budget." Unilever has already started
to change the way it sells some of its products. In Spain, the company
sells Surf detergent in packages for as few as five washes, while in
Greece, it now offers mashed potatoes and mayonnaise in small packages,
and has created a low-cost brand for basic goods such as tea and olive
oil, according to The Telegraph.
Chastised for failing to spot
it was coming in 2007, America's central bank quickly embarked on a
series of policies designed to show it meant business in easing the
crisis and preventing a repeat of the Great Depression. Unlike then,
many of the severest headwinds facing the US are beyond the Fed's
control. "It is the uncertainty over the fiscal cliff in the US and
Europe's debt crisis that is really hurting," says Priya Misra, a
strategist in New York at Bank of America. The bank predicts the Fed
will introduce a third, $600bnof QE before the end of the year. Bernanke
admitted in June that a third round of QE will be subject to
"diminishing returns". It is a view that an increasing number of
investors subscribe to. If the world's most powerful central banker can
no longer deliver the 'shock and awe' that suited during a period of
crisis, he must hope that governments in Europe and in the US quickly
find the right mix of policies to foster growth and trim debt, The
Telegraph reports.
The Government was facing calls last night to increase support for cash-strapped small businesses
as new figures revealed that more than a million are suffering because
customers, many of them larger rivals, are delaying payments. The total
amount owed to Britain's small and medium-sized enterprises has climbed
to a record £36.5bn in the past six months, putting even more strain on
the cash-flow of already hard-pressed companies and pushing some to the
brink. Chuka Umunna, the Shadow Business Secretary, said: "These figures
expose an ongoing national scandal. Small businesses are being forced,
in effect, to bankroll many of their largest customers who simply refuse
to pay on time. It is totally outrageous and unacceptable," says The
Times.
Lonmin is set to hold a "peace accord" meeting
this week after the violence at a mine in South Africa that claimed 44
lives spread to bus drivers that take workers on to the site. After a
week of mourning, only 13% of the 28,000 workforce returned to work
yesterday, which was not enough to restart the mine. Those that showed
up were prevented from entering the shafts by militant colleagues. A
spokeswoman for the company said that some of its bus drivers were
visited by a group of 30 people who warned of "repercussions" if they
carried workers to the Marikana mine . Lonmin has taken to local radio
stations to urge miners to return to work. The company would not confirm
whether it would lay off staff or set an ultimatum for workers to
return to the mines now that the period of mourning has ended, The Times
explains.
German business confidence it at is lowest
level for more than two years according to figures that underscore the
drag of the debt crisis on Europe's powerhouse economy. The influential
Ifo Institute said business confidence in Germany fell for the fourth
consecutive month in August amid fears that the country is heading for
recession. The institute's business climate index, which surveys
companies in manufacturing, construction, wholesaling and retailing,
showed that expectations for German exports was negative for the first
time in three years. Hans-Werner Sinn, president of the Ifo Institute,
said: "The German economy continues to falter." Dominique Barbet of BNP
Paribas said: "The declining growth rate in Germany shows that the
country is not immune from the general slowdown in Europe and outside
Europe." The data caused Brent crude to drop. Stockmarkets were broadly
flat on low trading volumes, The Telegraph reports.
Finnace
Secretary John Swinney will face calls today from CBI Scotland director
Iain McMillan to freeze taxes and trim Scottish Government spending
to free up cash for infrastructure projects. In its submission ahead of
next month's Scottish budget, the business lobbying group is demanding
that Swinney adopts a "bolder approach" to slashing the cost of
government by capping the public sector wage bill, outsourcing more
services to the private sector and spinning off Scottish Water. The CBI
also wants to see graduates contributing to the cost of their university
education, adding more money to the devolved administration's £35bn
budget. The organisation is challenging Swinney not to increase taxes
for businesses during the current three-year spending review, following
on from the £95m tax on large retailers in last year's budget and the
£36m levy on empty premises, The Scotsman reports.
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