Stocks finish flat despite decent data
Market Movers techMARK 2,096.03 +0.20% FTSE 100 5,805.05 0.00% FTSE 250 11,972.15 +0.92%
Stocks
pared gains to finish flat by the close on Thursday despite a barrage
of better-than-expected data the world over – including UK gross domestic product (GDP) figures – and upbeat speculation about Asia’s largest economies, China and Japan. Markets were initially given a lift this morning after it was announced that the UK economy expanded by 1.0%
in the third quarter, compared with the 0.4% decline seen in the second
quarter and well ahead of the 0.6% increase expected. That was the
strongest reading since late 2007 and means that the economy exited from
its double-dip recession. Analysts at Barclays Research and
Investec now expect quantitative easing (QE) to be off the table at the
next Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting. Having said that, a poll
by Reuters out over the weekend placed the probability for further QE in
November at 60%. Barclays said: "We have changed our policy
call and now expect the current round of asset purchases, due to be
completed at the end of this month, to be the last (we had previously
expected an additional £50bn of QE in November).” China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said today that the Chinese industry sector
performance has shown “signs of stabilisation”. The Ministry said that
fourth-quarter industrial output growth may be faster than that seen in
the third “which will help the country to achieve its annual economic
growth target of 7.5%”. Meanwhile, reports from a Japanese newspaper that the Bank of Japan
would boost stimulus were also helped to lift markets higher today.
According to the Nikkei newspaper, Japan will up its asset purchase
programme by 10trn yen to 90trn yen at its policy meeting on October
30th. US jobless claims and durable goods orders came in better than forecasts today, a good sign ahead of the big one, the US gross domestic product report,
due out tomorrow afternoon. Consensus forecasts are for an annualised
expansion of 1.9% in the third quarter, an acceleration from the 1.3%
growth in the preceding three months.
FTSE 100: Carnival and Unilever gain but resources provide a drag
Cruise operator Carnival jumped in afternoon trade, buoyed by news that its US rival Royal Caribbean has raised its full-year forecast. Consumer products giant Unilever
was in demand after underlying sales growth beat expectations in the
third quarter, helped by a strong performance in the emerging markets. However, mining stocks were heavily out of favour this afternoon, with Evraz, ENRC and Kazakhmys registering steep falls. However, precious metals producer Fresnillo bucked the trend after approving the feasibility study for the development of the $500m San Julian silver project in Mexico. Oil giant Royal Dutch Shell
was down after announcing that it is looking to buy Hess Corporation's
stakes in the Beryl area fields and the Scottish Area Gas Evacuation
Systems (SAGE) in the North Sea for $525m. Also lower was media giant WPP
after it admitted its third-quarter growth was slower than that seen in
the second quarter, which also came in short of expectations, while the
fourth quarter is set to slow further. ARM Holdings
was in the red as investors took profits following the previous two
day's surge; the stock is now up around 12% on the week after after the
chip designer beat forecasts in the third quarter and gave a confident
outlook for the rest of the year. Speciality chemicals group Johnson Matthey was given a boost after sector peers BASF and AZ Electronic Materials reiterated their full-year targets.
FTSE 250: Debenhams leads after full-year results
Department store group Debenhams
surged after the company reported resilient full-year results and said
it would be continuing its share buy-back programme for the next 12
months amidst 'challenging' conditions for the British consumer. Speciality chemicals producer AZ Electronic Materials
also jumped after maintaining full-year guidance, saying that it made
"solid progress" in the third quarter despite an uncertain
macro-economic environment. Oil and gas group Salamander Energy
gained after saying the Bravo jacket is now en route to the Bualuang
oil field, where the company's operated block B8/38 is located, in the
Gulf of Thailand. Bwin.party rose after saying that it
has formed an exclusive partnership with social gaming provider Zynga to
develop and operate real money online and mobile poker and casino
services in the UK. Essar Energy and New World Resources were both in decline following reports that an investigation into diesel pricing in underway.
AIM/Small Cap Report |
FTSE 100 - Risers Carnival (CCL) 2,505.00p +3.04% Fresnillo (FRES) 1,930.00p +2.17% Aggreko (AGK) 2,089.00p +2.10% Unilever (ULVR) 2,310.00p +1.99% International Consolidated Airlines Group SA (CDI) (IAG) 160.00p +1.78% Wood Group (John) (WG.) 848.50p +1.74% Johnson Matthey (JMAT) 2,253.00p +1.67% Next (NXT) 3,618.00p +1.54% Imperial Tobacco Group (IMT) 2,330.00p +1.48% Babcock International Group (BAB) 953.50p +1.44% FTSE 100 - Fallers Evraz (EVR) 235.40p -5.95% Eurasian Natural Resources Corp. (ENRC) 333.40p -2.40% WPP (WPP) 789.50p -2.29% Kazakhmys (KAZ) 736.00p -1.87% ARM Holdings (ARM) 665.00p -1.55% Royal Dutch Shell 'A' (RDSA) 2,088.50p -1.49% Amec (AMEC) 1,034.00p -1.43% Resolution Ltd. (RSL) 210.60p -1.13% Royal Dutch Shell 'B' (RDSB) 2,165.00p -1.12% Anglo American (AAL) 1,857.50p -1.04% FTSE 250 - Risers Debenhams (DEB) 119.00p +9.17% F&C Asset Management (FCAM) 101.00p +6.88% Bwin.party Digital Entertainment (BPTY) 125.50p +6.72% Anite (AIE) 143.60p +6.37% AZ Electronic Materials SA (DI) (AZEM) 336.00p +6.33% Drax Group (DRX) 548.00p +5.38% Salamander Energy (SMDR) 192.30p +5.37% Pace (PIC) 170.00p +4.87% Home Retail Group (HOME) 110.60p +4.64% Oxford Instruments (OXIG) 1,337.00p +4.13% FTSE 250 - Fallers Kentz Corporation Ltd. (KENZ) 398.90p -3.37% Bumi (BUMI) 249.00p -3.34% Ruspetro (RPO) 102.70p -2.19% Essar Energy (ESSR) 132.30p -2.00% Petropavlovsk (POG) 416.70p -1.91% Supergroup (SGP) 660.00p -1.64% Cranswick (CWK) 760.50p -1.62% Regus (RGU) 101.60p -1.45% Hochschild Mining (HOC) 496.70p -1.45% Hansteen Holdings (HSTN) 75.05p -1.25%
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European broker round-up |
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FTSE 100 | Euronext | Dax perf | CAC 40 |
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European Markets Finished Mixed Thursday, Earnings In Focus
The European markets have
ended Thursday's session with mixed results. Corporate earnings results
from a number of major companies are continuing to roll in, as the
busiest week of the reporting season nears its end. The better than
expected U.K. GDP report provided a boost, as the country exited a
double-dip recession. Economic news from the U.S. was also better than
expected, with a sharp rebound in durable goods orders and a decline in
weekly jobless claims.
Finance Minister Yiannis Stournaras
said Wednesday that its international lenders have agreed to give
Athens extended time and other concessions for meeting the terms of the
country's bailout program.
Stournaras said a new package of
austerity measures would be put to vote in the parliament next week. The
finance minister, however, did not specify how much extra time Athens
had been granted by its creditors. Nevertheless, media reports citing a
leaked copy of the draft loan agreement suggested that Greece had been
given until the end of 2016 to meet the bailout targets.
In March, Greece pledged
a series of economic reforms and spending cuts worth 13.5 billion euros
for 2013 and 2014 in exchange for a joint 130 billion euros bailout
from the troika of lenders, consisting of the European Union, the
European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
Athens
has long been seeking an extension of up to two years to implement the
economic reforms and spending cuts agreed under the bailout deal. The
Greek government had been negotiating with representatives of the troika
for months for release of the next tranche of bailout loan, as well as
more time and concessions for implementing the bailout conditions.
The Federal Reserve
concluded its 2-day meeting on Wednesday and, as expected, made no
change to its highly accommodative monetary policy. The Federal Reserve
will continue to purchase $40 billion of mortgage-backed securities per
month, and gave no indication they will expand their quantitative easing
program before year's end.
"Unemployment rate remains elevated,"
the Fed said in a statement accompanying its decision. More
encouraging, "Household spending has advanced a bit more quickly," and
housing has "improved from a depressed level."
The Euro Stoxx 50 index of Eurozone bluechip stocks lost 0.30 percent, but the Stoxx Europe 50 index, which includes some major U.K. companies, added 0.14 percent.
The DAX of Germany climbed by 0.10 percent and the FTSE 100 of the U.K. gained 0.00 percent. The CAC 40 of France declined by 0.44 percent and the SMI of Switzerland fell by 0.31 percent.
In Frankfurt, BASF rose
by 1.05 percent. The chemical giant reported a decline in profit for
the third quarter, hurt by increased taxes, while sales advanced 8
percent, beating estimates. The company also confirmed its forecast for
record sales and operating profit this year.
Adidas gained 0.62 percent, after winning a legal battle with bitter athletic-shoe rival Nike over patent infringement.
Bayer increased by 0.79 percent, after announcing a collaboration agreement on cancer therapies with Qiagen.
Daimler declined by 2.99 percent, after the auto company warned that it will miss its full year operating profit target.
In Paris, France Telecom
dropped by 5.16 percent. The company reported third-quarter revenues of
10.76 billion euros, lower than 11.15 billion euros in the
corresponding period last year on a comparable basis.
AXA rose by 1.04 percent, after the insurer reported a 1.3 percent increase in 9-month revenues.
Dassault Systèmes
advanced by 2.28 percent. The company posted higher IFRS net earnings
attributable to equity holders of the parent of 82.6 million euros
versus 76.4 million euros a year ago.
In London, Unilever climbed
by 1.99 percent. The consumer goods maker posted a 5.9 per cent
increase in underlying sales in the third quarter, beating analyst
forecasts.
Royal Dutch Shell decreased by 1.49 percent.
The company announced an agreement with Hess Corp to acquire its
interests in the Beryl area fields and the Scottish Area Gas Evacuation
System for $525 million.
AstraZeneca finished higher by
0.42 percent. Third quarter sales fell by 19 percent, after the loss of
exclusivity on antipsychotic drug Seroquel. Earnings for the quarter
also declined by 12 percent.
WPP lost 2.29 percent, after
the company reduced its full year revenue guidance. Revenues are now
expected to grow between 2.5 and 3.0 percent, down from prior
expectations of 3.5 percent growth.
Credit Suisse advanced by 0.09 percent in Zurich. The Swiss banking giant unveiled plans to cut costs further after posting a 63 percent fall in third-quarter profit.
Shares of Novartis dipped by 0.70 percent, after posting worse-than-expected third quarter sales.
Underpinned by a surge in services output, the U.K. economy
expanded at the fastest pace in five years during the three months to
September, ending three straight quarters of contraction, preliminary
data from the Office for National Statistics showed Thursday.
Officially
exiting from a double-dip recession, the economy grew by a bigger-than
expected 1 percent sequentially in the third quarter. It followed a 0.4
percent fall in the second quarter and 0.3 percent drop in the first
three months of the year. Gross domestic product was forecast to rise
0.6 percent in the third quarter.
U.K. services output
expanded 1.7 percent in August from a year ago, following a 1.1 percent
rise in July, the Office for National Statistics said Thursday.
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US Market Report |
Stocks Pull Back Amid Fitch Downgrade Rumors
Mirroring
the trend seen in the previous session, stocks have moved back to the
downside over the course of the trading day on Thursday after failing to
sustain a strong move to the upside at the open. Rumors of a possible
downgrade of the U.S. credit rating contributed to the pullback by the
markets.
The major averages are currently posting modest losses, extending a recent downward trend. The Dow is down 22.88 points or 0.2 percent at 13,054.46, the Nasdaq is down 1.16 points or less than a tenth of a percent at 2,980.54 and the S&P 500 is down 1.20 points or 0.1 percent at 1,407.55.
The
initial strength on Wall Street was partly due to a positive reaction
to a batch of largely upbeat economic data, including a report showing
that the U.K. emerged from recession in the third quarter.
The report from the U.K. Office for National Statistics said the U.K. economy grew by 1 percent in the third quarter after contracting in each of the three previous quarters.
The U.S. Labor Department also
released a report showing a bigger than expected drop by initial
jobless claims in the week ended October 20th, while a report from the
Commerce Department showed that durable goods orders rebounded by more
than expected in September.
However, stocks gave back some
ground following the release of a separate report from the National
Association of Realtors showing a much smaller than expected increase in
pending home sales.
NAR said its pending home sales index
edged up by 0.3 percent to 99.5 in September after falling by 2.6
percent to 99.2 in August. Economists had been expecting a more
substantial rebound by the index of about 2.5 percent.
Adding to the selling pressure were rumors that Fitch Ratings intended to release a statement regarding a downgrade of its AAA credit rating for the U.S.
While
a Fitch spokesman later referred to the ratings agency's July statement
indicating that its negative outlook on the AAA rating is unlikely to
be resolved until late 2013, the downgrade worries continue to weigh on
the markets.
Sector News
Housing stocks have
shown a notable move to the downside on the heels of the disappointing
pending home sales data. Reflecting the weakness in the housing sector,
the Philadelphia Housing Sector Index has tumbled by 2.4 percent.
Meritage Homes
(MTH) has helped to lead the housing sector lower, with the homebuilder
down by 9.8 percent after releasing its third quarter results.
Commercial real estate, airline, and electronic storage stocks have also come under pressure over the course of the trading day.
Meanwhile,
considerable strength remains visible among gold stocks, as reflected
by the 2.5 percent gain being posted by the NYSE Arca Gold Bugs Index.
The index is regaining some ground after ending the previous session at a
one-month closing low.
The strength in the gold sector comes
amid an increase by the price of the precious metal as well as upbeat
earnings news from Agnico-Eagle Mines (AEM) and Goldcorp (GG).
Other Markets
In overseas trading, stock markets
across the Asia-Pacific region moved mostly higher during trading on
Thursday. Japan's Nikkei 225 Index advanced by 1.1 percent, while Hong
Kong's Hang Seng Index edged up by 0.2 percent.
In the bond market, treasuries continue
to see modest weakness but have climbed well off their early lows.
Subsequently, the yield on the benchmark ten-year note, which moves
opposite of its price, is up by 2.4 basis points at 1.799 percent after
reaching a high of 1.852 percent.
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Broker tips |
WPP, Reckitt, ASOS
Investec has maintained its 'buy' rating for media and advertising giant WPP but has put its 950p target price under review after a disappointing third-quarter trading update on Thursday.
"3Q IMS is disappointing with slower US/Europe but also Emerging
markets. The latter is expected to bounce back but other areas may stay
tough, so numbers reduce slightly," said analyst Steve Liechti.
Nevertheless, Liechti said: "Shares likely to be weaker today but
international marketing growth story remains, so a buying opportunity
could emerge." Panmure Gordon has raised its target price for consumer products group Reckitt Benckiser after strong growth in Europe and North America (ENA) helped like-for-like (LFL) sales beat forecasts in the third quarter.
"Reckitt only reiterated its full-year outlook, and as such we believe
the initial 6% jump in the share price was a slight over-reaction.
Nevertheless, we nudge our price target up by 3% from 3540p to 3650p and
reiterate our 'hold' recommendation." Seymour Pierce has raised its target price for online retailer ASOS from 1,900p to 2,350p to reflect the recent share price momentum, but the broker has maintained its 'hold' rating.
Seymour analyst Freddie George said: "The founder of BestSeller,
however, who holds 27% of the equity (recently increased by one
percentage point), is getting closer to the 30% bidding threshold while
we believe the Chinese development plans will be pushed further into the
future."
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