London close: Miners jump on hopes of central bank action
Market Movers
- techMARK 2,107.18 +0.53%
- FTSE 100 5,758.41 +0.82%
- FTSE 250 11,503.13 +0.81%
- Central banks in China, US and Europe expected to act
- UK manufacturing beats expectations
- Fresnillo leads miners higher
Stocks markets in the States may have been closed for Labour Day but
that didn't stop bourses in Europe from registering decent gains on
Monday, with London's Footsie starting the week strongly, up 0.82 per
cent on the day.
"Despite continued poor economic data from
China, as well as Europe, investors appear to be taking comfort from the
fact that this is likely to make further monetary easing more likely in
the near term, thus supporting asset prices," said market analyst
Michael Hewson from CMC Markets.
According to a monthly survey by HSBC, the China manufacturing purchasing managers' index
(PMI) dropped from 49.3 in July to 47.6 in August, its lowest reading
since March 2009. The news follows the official PMI data from last week
which fell to a nine-month low of 49.2. Any figure below 50 indicates a
contraction.
"However, the data does suggest that Chinese
policymakers have plenty of room to promote easing tools to spur growth
and have previously this year re-armed the country by cutting rates. As
such, hopes that China will soon have no choice but to stimulate growth
have been the main driver of today's gains," said market strategist
Ishaq Siddiqi from ETX Capital.
The UK's own manufacturing
data beat expectations last in August, though it still posted its
fourth straight month of contraction. The manufacturing PMI rose to
49.5, from 45.2 in July, a four-month high and better than the 46
reading expected by analysts.
Nevertheless, the focus of the markets this week will undoubtedly be on the European Central Bank
(ECB) monetary policy meeting on Thursday at which President Mario
Draghi is widely expected to unveil plans for buying sovereign debt in
order to bring down bond yields in peripheral nations.
Following on from last week's climax of the Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke's closely watched speech at the Jackson Hole
symposium, markets widely believe that further quantitative easing (QE)
is now on the cards for the central bank's next meeting on September
13th and 14th. A close eye will be keep on the upcoming payrolls and
manufacturing figures due out this week in the US, which will likely be
the deciding factor in whether the Fed pulls the trigger or not.
FTSE 100: Miners gain on stimulus hopes
A
strong showing by the miners assured that the Footsie was firmly in the
red on Monday afternoon in spite of some steep falls for some
heavyweight stocks, such as Glencore, Admiral and ARM Holdings.
Disappointing Chinese economic figures, which usually results in a
sell-off in the mining sector, had the adverse effect today as
speculation mounted that Chinese policy-makers would act to stimulate
the world's second-largest economy, one of the biggest sources of demand
for the miners.
Meanwhile, precious metals peers Fresnillo and Randgold
were among the highest risers on hopes that silver and gold prices
(dollar-denominated commodities) will rise as the US dollar weakens
after the potential launch of QE3. Other miners, such as Vedanta, Kazakhmys and Rio Tinto, also finished the day with decent gains.
However, Glencore was bucking the trend on the back of rumours that it will be sticking to its original offer for mining group Xstrata
in spite of growing opposition to the terms. Qatar Holdings, which owns
around 12% of the group, confirmed last week that it would vote against
the merger at the shareholder meeting on Friday.
Car insurance giant Admiral
was under heavy selling pressure on Monday afternoon after Credit
Suisse downgraded its rating on the shares from 'outperform' to
'neutral', saying that there isn't much upside left in the stock.
Canaccord Genuity also downgraded Admiral to 'sell' today, while Exane
BNP Paribas reiterated its 'underperform' recommendation.
Chip group ARM Holdings
was also lower after Deutsche Bank downgraded its recommendation from
'hold' to 'sell'. "Despite reflecting many of ARM's long-term growth
drivers such as rising royalty rates and penetration of new markets in
our model, we expect ARM's [earnings per share] growth to slow down to
mid-teens," said analyst Kai Korschelt.
FTSE 250: Talvivaara gains after reassuring investors
Finnish zinc and nickel mining company Talvivaara
was a high riser after it denied it will be cutting jobs as part of a
cost savings plan. Rumours had been circulating that the low price of
nickel would force a reduction in headcount.
Shares in Lonmin,
one of the world's biggest platinum producers, rose on after reports
the firm had agreed details of a wage deal with striking miners. Work on
the company's Marikana project in South Africa has been at a standstill
for three weeks after a pay dispute turned violent, culminating in a
bloody showdown with police that left 34 miners dead.
Africa-focused oil group Ophir Energy rose after significantly upping estimates of potential resources at one of its sites in Tanzania.
Meanwhile, house-builders were on the up after Panmure Gordon today lifted its targets across the sector. Barratt Developments, Taylor Wimpey and Bovis Homes all benefitted from the forecast change.
FTSE 100 - Risers Fresnillo (FRES) 1,627.00p +4.23%
Kazakhmys (KAZ) 610.00p +2.87%
Vedanta Resources (VED) 892.00p +2.82%
Sage Group (SGE) 303.50p +2.46%
Wolseley (WOS) 2,602.00p +2.36%
BT Group (BT.A) 222.50p +2.25%
Rio Tinto (RIO) 2,795.50p +2.19%
Hargreaves Lansdown (HL.) 633.00p +1.93%
Next (NXT) 3,644.00p +1.93%
Tullow Oil (TLW) 1,389.00p +1.91%
FTSE 100 - Fallers Admiral Group (ADM) 1,150.00p -3.04%
ARM Holdings (ARM) 559.50p -2.53%
Aggreko (AGK) 2,337.00p -0.97%
Morrison (Wm) Supermarkets (MRW) 278.20p -0.64%
Ashmore Group (ASHM) 327.00p -0.61%
Resolution Ltd. (RSL) 214.60p -0.56%
Kingfisher (KGF) 274.10p -0.54%
Xstrata (XTA) 947.20p -0.53%
Severn Trent (SVT) 1,726.00p -0.29%
ICAP (IAP) 316.90p -0.25%
FTSE 250 - Risers Talvivaara Mining Company (TALV) 140.00p +11.64%
Barratt Developments (BDEV) 158.60p +5.73%
Persimmon (PSN) 734.00p +5.16%
Centamin (DI) (CEY) 83.25p +4.72%
Soco International (SIA) 351.50p +4.36%
Bovis Homes Group (BVS) 492.60p +4.10%
Hochschild Mining (HOC) 450.00p +4.05%
Taylor Wimpey (TW.) 53.25p +3.90%
Ophir Energy (OPHR) 586.00p +3.81%
Phoenix Group Holdings (DI) (PHNX) 507.50p +3.57%
FTSE 250 - Fallers CSR (CSR) 310.00p -4.79%
Bumi (BUMI) 303.20p -4.65%
Petra Diamonds Ltd.(DI) (PDL) 101.70p -2.68%
Menzies(John) (MNZS) 613.50p -2.62%
Redrow (RDW) 151.10p -2.58%
Cape (CIU) 237.00p -2.23%
Heritage Oil (HOIL) 190.10p -2.01%
Kentz Corporation Ltd. (KENZ) 390.10p -1.86%
Henderson Group (HGG) 104.20p -1.79%
PayPoint (PAY) 705.00p -1.67%
US Market Report |
Markets Closed
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Broker Tips |
Broker tips: Morrisons, Prudential, Home Retail
Nomura has downgraded its rating for supermarket group Morrisons after analysing the recent Kantar grocery survey.
According to the survey, Morrisons' volume growth lagged behind its counterparts by around 4% at the last data point.
"We recognise MRW's ability to preserve profitability, having faced
volume headwinds from both Asda's Netto conversions (abating) and TSCO's
reset (ongoing), and expect resilient H1 interims (September 6th).
However, MRW's survey volume trend proves the tipping point for us to
revise our recommendation to 'neutral' (from 'buy')," the broker said.
Galvan Research and Trading has recommended to buy shares of insurance giant Prudential, saying that the stock's recent underperformance is 'unwarranted'.
"Although recent weeks have seen the market plump for sector peer Aviva
rather than Prudential, Galvan Research regards the Pru as a 'buy' on
the basis of the recent relative share price underperformance and the
fact that the fundamental downside remains cushioned by very strong
Asian growth," said Galvan's head of research, Andrew Gibson.
Investec has upgraded its rating for Argos and Homebase owner Home Retail Group, saying that the firm's second-quarter trading statement next week could see a pick up in sentiment.
"While the market short position in Home Retail has retreated, it
remains very high and we therefore believe the shares should react
positively to evidence of more resilient trading at Argos," Investec
said on Monday morning.
"With share price risk weighted to the
upside in our view, we are therefore moving from 'sell' to 'buy', with a
new target of 109p (70p previously)."
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