London open: Tentative start ahead of Bernanke speech
Market Movers
- techMARK 2,091.69 +0.05%
- FTSE 100 5,725.33 +0.10%
- FTSE 250 11,358.62 +0.29%
- All eyes turn to Bernanke - Mining stocks wanted early on after recent losses - Redrow Chairman makes takeover approach
Stock markets across Europe have been rather subdued over the past few
days and the opening hour of Friday's session was no different as
investors continued to show caution ahead of a speech by Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke later this evening. The big question on everyone's lips - "will Bernanke hint at another imminent round of quantitative easing (QE3)?"
- will be answered tonight as the Fed frontman takes the stage in his
keynote speech during the meeting of central bankers at Jackson Hole,
Wyoming. During the lead up to the event, Bernanke was widely
expected to announce a new raft of easing measures. However, as Michael
Hewson, the senior market analyst at CMC Markets UK, explained this
morning, the "buoyant nature" of recent US economic data may have eased
the Fed's concerns about the economy and could limit the room for
manoeuvre. "Whatever Bernanke does say it remains quite likely
that once the markets have absorbed the focus will inevitably shift
towards the next Fed meeting which is scheduled for September 12th and
13th," he said. Markets will also be looking ahead to a
European Central Bank (ECB) meeting on September 6th and the German
Constitutional Court ruling on the European Stability Mechanism on
September 12th, all labelled as "risk" events by analysts at UniCredit yesterday which could lead to significant volatility on markets.
In other news, following the meeting between German Chancellor Angela
Merkel and Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti in Berlin yesterday,
Merkel has requested that Italy delays its request for aid, according to Spanish newspaper El Mundo.
FTSE 100: Miners lead the risers early on
Mining stocks were making gains this morning, rebounding after bearing the brunt of 'risk-off' trade over the past few days. Kazakhmys, Vedanta, Glencore, Rio Tinto, Randgold, Polymetal, Fresnillo, Anglo American and ENRC were among the top risers on the FTSE 100 in the opening hour. Heading the other way was media giant WPP
which was extending its losses after having to scale back its full-year
like-for-like revenue target yesterday. Societe Generale and Berenberg
both reduced their targets for the stock this morning. Financial stocks were also unwanted early on with Royal Bank of Scotland, Hargreaves Lansdown, Barclays, Lloyds and Standard Chartered all suffering. Utilities group SSE was making gains after UBS upgraded its rating for the stock from 'neutral' to 'buy' and hiked its target by 13% to 1,515p.
FTSE 250: Redrow rises, albeit mildly, on potential takeover
House-builder Redrow
was in demand after saying that three investment firms are interested
in a takeover, one of which is controlled by the company's Chairman and
well-known businessman, Steve Morgan. While the offer of 152p a
share represents a 23.8% premium to the 90-day average share price, the
stock has risen strongly in recent weeks on speculation, closing
yesterday at 151p. First-half profits at restaurant and pub operator Restaurant Group came
in slightly ahead of expectations, helping the firm to raised its
interim dividend by an eighth. Shares edged higher from the off. Information technology solutions provider Computacenter dropped after reporting a slight fall in profits in the first half as additional start-up costs dented the bottom line.
| Europe Market Report |
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European
stocks are seen opening lower on Friday, extending the previous
session's losses, as investors watered-down expectations that Fed
Chairman Bernanke will signal new boost to the U.S. economy at the
Jackson Hole meet later in the day.
Also,
sentiment soured after Moody's Investor Service said its review of
Spain's government rating for a possible downgrade will continue through
the end of September because of pending information.
The
review is dependent on the scope of the bank recapitalization, support
available under the European Stability Mechanism and potential changes
to the existing crisis-management framework, the rating agency said.
Asian markets are trading mostly lower, with Japan's Nikkei index
down 1.5 percent after official data showed Japan's industrial
production contracted a seasonally adjusted 1.2 percent month-over-month
in July amid slumping global demand. The Japanese yen edged higher on
safe-haven buying as weak economic data at home and out of Europe curbed
investor risk appetite.
China's Shanghai Composite index is
moving down 0.17 percent, heading for a fourth month of losses, on
earnings disappointment. China is prepared to buy more EU sovereign
debt, but wants debt-stricken countries such as Greece, Spain and Italy
to embrace budget cuts and get their finances in order to overcome the
debt crisis, media reports quoted Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao as saying
at a state function in Beijing.
Seoul shares
are posting modest losses following disappointing economic data. South
Korea's factory output fell a seasonally adjusted 1.6 percent from a
month earlier in July, contracting for the second straight month,
government data showed today, raising concerns the nation's economy
might be faltering amid slowing global growth and renewed concerns over
the eurozone debt crisis.
Closer
home, an index measuring consumer confidence in the United Kingdom
remained unchanged in August, data from a survey by market research
agency GfK showed. The consumer confidence index remained unchanged from
the previous month at -29 in August. Economists had expected the index
to rise to -27 compared to a reading of -31 in August 2011.
In
corporate news, French media group Lagardere SCA reported a higher
profit for the first half of fiscal 2012, helped mainly by lower tax
expenses and an equity accounted contribution from aerospace and defense
firm EADS.
Qatar Holding LLC,
Xstrata Plc's second largest shareholder, said it plans to vote against
the merger between Swiss firms Glencore International Plc and Xstrata,
unless the merger offer is sweetened.
Flights at German airliner Deutsche Lufthansa AG
may potentially be impacted from Friday as its cabin crew members
prepare for a strike that may put further pressure on its business and
also throw into disarray travel plans of thousands of passengers.
Steel giant ArcelorMittal SA
and the United Steelworkers union have failed to reach a labor deal
with just a day left for the expiry of the current four-year labor
contract as they remain in "conflict", according to a release by the
USW.
European stocks ended lower on
Thursday after official data showed confidence among euro-zone consumers
and businesses fell to its lowest level in three years in August.
Several weaker than expected economic reports from around the world also
stoked global growth worries, dragging the major European averages down
between 0.4 percent and 1.6 percent.
On
the economic front, jobless claims unexpectedly came in unchanged in
the week ended August 25, while a separate report from the Commerce
Department showed that personal income and spending rose by 0.3 percent
and 0.4 percent, respectively in July, in line with economist estimates.
The Dow and the S&P 500 slid about 0.8 percent each, while the
tech-heavy Nasdaq dropped 1.1 percent.
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| US Market Report |
US close: Stocks firmly lower ahead of Bernanke speech
Dow Jones -106.77 at 13,000.71 Nasdaq -32.48 at 3,048.71 S&P 500 -11.01 at 1,399.48
US stocks ended the day firmly lower on Thursday with investors
naturally hesitant to commit ahead of Friday's eagerly awaited speech
from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke at the Jackson Hole central
bankers' economic symposium. The Dow Jones fell to the 13,000 mark, while the S&P 500 dropped below 1,400 for the first time in a fortnight.
There is a general agreement amongst analysts that Bernanke, who is
giving a speech titled "Monetary Policy Since the Crisis", won't be
giving the market any miracles and is unlikely to make an announcement
over a third round of quantitative easing. Meanwhile, Spain's
Prime Minister, Mariano Rajoy, said his government wants to see what the
aid conditions are exactly before it commits itself to asking for a
bailout from the EU, raising the prospect of the uncertainty over the
timing of the Iberian country's request stretching on longer than
anticipated and, as is well known, markets do not like uncertainty.
Also weighing down the mood was speculation over what will occur at
next week's European Central Bank meeting, which is set to take place on
Thursday. There has been much chatter about whether or not the bank
will be in a position to take any firm action over the on-going economic
crisis. In economic news today, initial jobless claims were
unchanged at 374,000 last week, according to the Labor Department, after
claims for the week before were revised up by 2,000. Meanwhile, US
consumer spending rose by 0.4% month-on-month in July, the biggest rise
since February, according to the Commerce Department. COMPANY NEWS In company news, web radio group Pandora Media said higher ad sales meant that second-quarter revenues beat expectations. Ciena
fell after the computer equipment manufacturer said sales would be
below analyst forecasts. It posted a reduction to quarterly losses. Vera Bradley, a women's fashion accessory firm, fell after posted a decline in quarterly profits as margins declined on improved revenue. Retailing firm Sears
dropped after being ousted from the S&P 500 Index as its public
float is below the 50% threshold required of index constituents. LyondellBasell will replace Sears in the S&P 500. There was better news elsewhere in the retail sector, as both Gap and Macy's
posted pleasing like-for-like sales figures for August. Gap's
like-for-like (LFL) sales were up 9% on a year earlier, way above the
5.5% improvement the market had been expecting. Macy's also knocked the
ball out of the ground, with LFL sales growth of 5.1% versus
expectations of a 3.3% gain. Discount chain Target and cash-and-carry barn operator Costco also topped expectations with their LFL sales figures. OTHER MARKETS The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury fell to 1.62% from around 1.65% towards the close of trading on Wednesday. The October delivery contract for Crude oil settled down 0.91% at $94.62 per barrel on the New York Mercantile exchange. S&P 500 - Risers GameStop Corp. (GME) $19.16 +2.96% Gap Inc. (GPS) $36.11 +2.67% Marathon Petroleum Corporation (MPC) $50.81 +2.19% Lexmark International Inc. (LXK) $21.53 +2.18% DeVry Inc. (DV) $18.98 +2.04% Coach Inc. (COH) $57.35 +1.96% CIGNA Corp. (CI) $45.68 +1.81% Assurant Inc. (AIZ) $34.59 +1.80% Frontier Communications Co. (FTR) $4.74 +1.72% Costco Wholesale Corp. (COST) $98.59 +1.52% S&P 500 - Fallers First Solar Inc. (FSLR) $19.67 -18.71% Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD) $52.90 -7.92% JDS Uniphase Corp. (JDSU) $11.07 -5.79% Netflix Inc. (NFLX) $60.48 -4.67% F5 Networks Inc. (FFIV) $97.39 -4.60% Seagate Technology Plc (STX) $32.21 -4.11% Juniper Networks Inc. (JNPR) $17.75 -3.95% Vulcan Materials Co. (VMC) $38.50 -3.73% Leucadia National Corp. (LUK) $21.29 -3.36% Alpha Natural Res (ANR) $5.94 -3.26% Dow Jones I.A - Risers Merck & Co. Inc. (MRK) $43.12 +0.14% Procter & Gamble Co. (PG) $66.88 +0.01% Dow Jones I.A - Fallers Caterpillar Inc. (CAT) $84.47 -1.88% Intel Corp. (INTC) $24.27 -1.61% Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO) $18.90 -1.56% United Technologies Corp. (UTX) $79.06 -1.38% Walt Disney Co. (DIS) $49.42 -1.24% Alcoa Inc. (AA) $8.44 -1.17% Bank of America Corp. (BAC) $7.91 -1.12% Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) $30.32 -1.08% JP Morgan Chase & Co. (JPM) $36.90 -1.07% McDonald's Corp. (MCD) $88.70 -1.06% Nasdaq 100 - Risers Costco Wholesale Corp. (COST) $98.59 +1.52% Electronic Arts Inc. (EA) $13.00 +1.17% Starbucks Corp. (SBUX) $49.71 +1.10% Warner Chilcott Plc (WCRX) $13.61 +0.81% Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. (BBBY) $67.02 +0.37% Cerner Corp. (CERN) $73.49 +0.31% Virgin Media Inc. (VMED) $27.41 +0.29% Priceline.Com Inc. (PCLN) $603.60 +0.07% Whole Foods Market Inc. (WFM) $97.04 +0.04% Biogen Idec Inc. (BIIB) $145.95 +0.04% Nasdaq 100 - Fallers Sears Holdings Corp. (SHLD) $52.90 -7.92% Netflix Inc. (NFLX) $60.48 -4.67% F5 Networks Inc. (FFIV) $97.39 -4.60% Seagate Technology Plc (STX) $32.21 -4.11% Check Point Software Technologies Ltd. (CHKP) $45.93 -3.75% Green Mountain Coffee Roasters Inc. (GMCR) $24.11 -3.37% Research in Motion Ltd. (RIMM) $6.71 -2.89% Marvell Technology Group Ltd. (MRVL) $10.18 -2.86% Expedia Inc. (EXPE) $51.48 -2.61% KLA-Tencor Corp. (KLAC) $50.89 -2.57% |
| Newspaper Round Up |
Friday newspaper round-up: Energy bills, Xstrata, China
Households are running out of ways to avoid being stung by higher energy bills
this winter after one of the UK's big suppliers ended its fixed deal.
EDF Energy is withdrawing its dual electricity and gas tariff, which is
guaranteed to be maintained until April 2014, after a last-minute
stampede. A rival supplier, Scottish and Southern Energy, unexpectedly
announced last week that it would raise prices by 9 per cent. Other
energy companies are expected to follow soon, triggering a rush by
consumers to protect themselves by signing up to cheaper fixed deals.
Some 700,000 households have signed up to EDF Energy's Blue + Price
Promise April 2014 tariff of 1,058 pounds a year, which compares
favourably with its standard variable tariff of 1,129 pounds, The Times
reports. The European Central Bank (ECB) would be given
sweeping authority over all 6,000 Eurozone banks under a plan being
drawn up by the European Commission, putting Brussels on a collision
course with Germany and the ECB itself, which have urged a more
decentralised first step towards "banking union". The plan, agreed at a
meeting this week between top aides to José Manuel Barroso, commission
president, and Michel Barnier, the EU's senior financial regulator,
would strip existing national supervisors of almost all authority to
shut down or restructure their countries' failing banks, giving those
powers to Frankfurt. Under the proposal, ultimate authority would pass
to a new ECB "supervisory board" separate from the ECB's existing
governing council. Although its make-up is still being debated, the
leading plan would create a 23-member board: a national representative
from each Eurozone country plus six independent members, including its
chair and vice-chair, The Financial Times explains. Qatar Holding has confirmed that it will vote against the $70bn merger of Glencore and Xstrata
next week after Glencore failed to propose any improvement in terms. As
the deal enters its final days before shareholders vote, Qatar, which
has a 12% stake in Xstrata, said that it could not accept Glencore's
offer of 2.8 of its shares for each one of Xstrata's. Bankers on both
sides of the deal, who stand to lose millions in fees if it collapses,
are trying to shape how its failure will be perceived by investors,
according to The Times. India's biggest privately owned steelmaker has triggered a trade row after it accused South Korean rivals of dumping steel.
Seshagiri Rao, the managing director and chief financial officer of JSW
Steel, told The Times that Korean companies, including Hyundai and
Posco, were abusing the terms of a free trade agreement and that he had
appealed to Delhi to clamp down on the practice. Mr Rao said: "An FTA
should be of mutual benefit, not put one side at an advantage. That
needs to be examined." An agreement signed in 2009 by Japan, India and
South Korea cut Delhi's import duties on steel from 7.5% to 3.15%. The
duty is due to fall to zero by 2014. In the three months to July, Indian
steel imports surged to 2.99m tonnes, compared with 1.92m tonnes during
the same period last year. Almost all of the extra imports came from
South Korea and Japan, which have about 196m tonnes of installed
steelmaking capacity between them but only 120m tonnes of domestic
demand, the newspaper reports. The impasse in Japan's
parliament has raised fears among investors that the world's third
largest economy is being driven towards a "fiscal cliff", Reuters
reported. "The government running out of money is not a story made up.
It's a real threat," Finance Minister Jun Azumi told a news conference,
making a last-ditch appeal for cooperation by opposition parties to pass
the bill. "Failing to pass the bill will give markets the impression
that Japan's fiscal management rests on shaky ground," he said. Unless
the bill clears the current parliamentary session that ends next week,
the government will start suspending or reducing some state spending to
avoid running out of money for as long as possible, the finance ministry
said, The Telegraph says. Premier Wen Jiabao told German
Chancellor Angela Merkel that Europe must "strike a balance" between
fiscal tightening and measures to promote growth. "Europe's debt crisis
has continued to worsen, giving rise to serious concerns in the
international community. Frankly, I am also worried," he said. His
comments mark a shift in Chinese policy. Beijing has until now backed
austerity across Euroland, but the severity of China's own
downturn has begun to rattle policymakers. Exports of electronic goods
to Italy crashed 43% in July from a year earlier, and sales to Germany
fell 11%. Caixin reported that processing trade to Europe fell 21%,
according to The Telegraph. An urgent government-level investigation has been launched to identify the source of an oil spill
in the North Sea off Aberdeenhire. A sheen of oil, estimated to contain
up to 132 tonnes of oil equivalent to almost 800 barrels was
spotted from the air 100 miles north-east of the St Fergus terminal on
the Buchan coast. The sheen is only two-and-a-half miles from a subsea
pipeline, operated by Talisman Energy, where an estimated 13 tonnes of
oil are believed to have leaked through a crack in the pipeline over the
past week. But detailed analysis has now ruled out any link between the
two spills. A spokesman for Aberdeen-based Talisman said yesterday that
the "third-party" sheen had been sighted by a spotter plane following
the discovery of a leak in the subsea pipeline that connects the Galley
field to the company's Tartan Alpha platform, 117 miles north-east of
Aberdeen, The Scotsman says. After five years of trying to force the TV world to "go Google",
the search company has abandoned its scheme to trade broadcast ads in
the same way as it does online banner ads.cIn a victory for the
traditional media establishment against a digital insurgent, Google
quietly announced in a blogpost on Thursday evening that it would close
its TV Ads in Adwords product later this year. The service, which at one
stage partnered with NBC Universal and the Hallmark Channel, was
supposed to combine the speed, flexibility and targeting capabilities of
the web with the emotional punch of the 30-second spot. But amid
resistance from some parts of Madison Avenue, Google struggled to obtain
enough airtime upon which to sell ads, The Financial Times explains.
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