London close: Stocks rebound as 'Glenstrata' deal pushed through
Market Movers
- techMARK 2,056.18 +0.29%
- FTSE 100 5,748.10 +0.18%
- FTSE 250 11,820.83 +0.65%
- Xstrata shareholders approve merger with Glencore - Hamas official says ceasefire has been agreed - Eurogroup meeting on Greece kicks off in Brussels
After a poor start on Tuesday, UK stocks rallied in afternoon trade to
finish broadly flat after shareholders approved the merger between FTSE
100 constituents Xstrata and Glencore; meanwhile, reports of easing tensions in the Middle East could have helped to lift sentiment late on. Hamas official Ayman Taha said this afternoon that Israel and Gaza militants have agreed on a ceasefire.
He said: "An agreement for calm has been reached. It will be declared
at nine o'clock (19:00 GMT) and go into effect at midnight (22:00 GMT)."
However, Israeli government spokesman Mark Regev told CNN this
afternoon that the "ball is still in play" and a deal has not been
finalised. The FTSE 100 closed only slightly higher this
afternoon though, following an impressive 2.36% surge the day before on
the back of increased hopes that US politicians will be able to deal
with the 'fiscal cliff' before automatic spending cuts and tax increases
come into effect at the start of 2103. Markets started on the back foot this morning as investors reacted to the news that Moody's last night stripped France
of its prized 'AAA' rating. The US rating agency said that the move was
due to "the risk to economic growth, and therefore to the government's
finances, posed by the country's persistent structural economic
challenges." Analyst Michael Hewson from CMC Markets said this
afternoon: "Markets have pretty much taken this in their stride given
that Moody's isn't telling the markets anything they don't already know,
however markets have drifted off their highs, as yesterday's blind
optimism gives way to some more pragmatic caution, ahead of this
evening's Eurogroup meeting on Greece." Eurozone finance ministers
are meeting in Brussels to discuss whether or not to release the next
tranche of aid for Greece. However, minutes before the start of the
meeting, Eurogroup President Jean-Claude Juncker claimed not to be entirely sure that a deal would take place tonight.
"We must still reach an understanding on several details and I would
expect that the chances are good that we will come to a final and joint
solution this evening. But I'm not entirely certain about the matter,"
he said.
FTSE 100: Xstrata gains after shareholder vote
Mining group Xstrata
finished the day as one of the best performers on the Footsie after
shareholders approved a multibillion-pound merger with commodities
trader Glencore. However, its Chairman Sir John Bond announced that he
would retire after the completion of the merger after shareholders did
not give the green light to the proposed retention arrangements for
management. Glencore finished with mild gains today. Chip designer ARM Holdings
was a heavy faller after Raymond James downgraded the stock from
'strong buy' to 'outperform'. In contrast, analysts at Barclays raised
their view of hotels giant Intercontinental Hotels to 'overweight', prompting shares to rise throughout the day. Shares in luxury brand Burberry got a boost after it was reported on Bloomberg TV that the company is likely to be able withstand the slowdown in China. Banking peers Barclays and HSBC
were lower after Andrew Bailey, the head of banking supervision at the
FSA, said that banks should face the threat of being broken up if they
do not comply with proposals to ring-fence retail and riskier
operations. Imperial Tobacco and British American Tobacco
both fell after the Australian government blocked a request for the
World Trade Organisation to investigate the companies' claims that it,
the Australian government, unlawfully seized their (and a number of
other companies') intellectual property. Australia banned the sale of
cigarettes sold in packaging containing trademarks. The country will not
be able to block a second request.
FTSE 250: Lonmin and Homeserve surge
Platinum miner Lonmin was a high riser after shareholders yesterday voted in favour of a 817m dollar rights issue to repair its balance sheet. Strong growth internationally saw home emergency repairs group HomeServe
achieve a decent increase in revenue and profit in the first half
despite a slight fall in customer numbers over the period, pushing
shares higher today. easyJet was flying high after delivering forecast-beating record profits boosted by higher margins and increased passenger numbers. LED manufacturer Dialight
surged after saying that it has received a major order from an unnamed
US power plant operator for over 1,000 LED lighting fixtures. Meanwhile, Paragon Group
shares took a hit despite the fact the company produced record profits
for the full year, enabling a 50% hike in its dividend and the promise
of a progressive payout policy.
FTSE 100 - Risers Xstrata (XTA) 986.60p +3.11% Burberry Group (BRBY) 1,247.00p +2.72% InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) 1,633.00p +2.70% International Consolidated Airlines Group SA (CDI) (IAG) 167.60p +2.57% Antofagasta (ANTO) 1,254.00p +2.28% Prudential (PRU) 889.00p +2.13% Aggreko (AGK) 2,160.00p +1.89% Shire Plc (SHP) 1,759.00p +1.85% Fresnillo (FRES) 1,980.00p +1.75% Johnson Matthey (JMAT) 2,325.00p +1.62% FTSE 100 - Fallers ARM Holdings (ARM) 726.50p -2.74% Meggitt (MGGT) 375.60p -1.37% Imperial Tobacco Group (IMT) 2,428.00p -1.30% Barclays (BARC) 246.50p -1.30% Anglo American (AAL) 1,694.00p -0.96% RSA Insurance Group (RSA) 111.20p -0.89% Sainsbury (J) (SBRY) 332.70p -0.86% HSBC Holdings (HSBA) 614.50p -0.61% Old Mutual (OML) 170.10p -0.53% British Sky Broadcasting Group (BSY) 749.50p -0.53% FTSE 250 - Risers Lonmin (LMI) 310.70p +13.42% Homeserve (HSV) 247.90p +11.17% Dialight (DIA) 1,136.00p +6.67% easyJet (EZJ) 692.00p +6.05% Diploma (DPLM) 468.80p +4.60% COLT Group SA (COLT) 107.00p +4.39% IP Group (IPO) 112.80p +3.96% Menzies(John) (MNZS) 602.50p +3.88% Anite (AIE) 135.00p +3.85% Atkins (WS) (ATK) 762.00p +3.67% FTSE 250 - Fallers Talvivaara Mining Company (TALV) 105.70p -5.79% Paragon Group Of Companies (PAG) 240.70p -3.72% Daejan Holdings (DJAN) 2,760.00p -3.60% Dunelm Group (DNLM) 622.50p -2.96% Mitie Group (MTO) 271.80p -2.93% Pace (PIC) 177.80p -2.68% Big Yellow Group (BYG) 323.60p -2.24% TalkTalk Telecom Group (TALK) 216.20p -2.22% Bumi (BUMI) 267.80p -2.19% Workspace Group (WKP) 298.70p -1.97%
Europe Market Report |
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Europe midday: Eurogroup still undecided on Greece
-Moody's downgrades France's debt rating -French 10 year bond yields rise by 5 basis points -EFSF could delay 3 year bond issue after Moody's action FTSE 100: -0.20% Dax-30: 0.19% Cac-40: -0.27% FTSE-Mibtel 30: -0.71% Ibex 35: -0.59% Stoxx 600: -0.13%
For the most part European equities are now giving back a little bit of
yesterday's enormous gains, as might have been expected. That ahead of this evening's meeting of Eurozone Finance Ministers and after rating agency Moody's decision to downgrade France's
debt to AA1 from AAA. Of particular importance, the rating agency's
decision may have negative implications for the EFSF rescue fund,
although not for the European Stability Mechanism (ESM) it is thought. Regarding the former, so-called Eurogroup
finance ministers are thought to be near a political agreement to
disburse the next loan tranche to Greece early in December, although
divisions remain over how exactly to place the country's debt stock on a
sustainable downwards trajectory. Greece's European partners
are willing to give the country more time to meet its obligations -but
not more money- whereas the International Monetary Fund believes that
Greece's debt load should not increase any further. The Eurogroup gathers today at 16:00 London time. According to Greek daily Ekathimerini,
sources close to Greece's Prime Minister, Antonis Samaras, expect a
tranche of 31.5bn in aid by December 5th and another 13bn in January.
Finland's Finance Minister, Jutta Urpilainen, however, has stated today
that his country is ready to give Greece more time to achieve its
financing programme targets, but not to give it more money. As
for France, Moody's last night said that: "France's fiscal outlook is
uncertain as a result of its deteriorating economic prospects, both in
the short - term due to subdued domestic and external demand" and
"structural rigidities" in the longer term. Somewhat ironically, the above comes soon after the country unveiled a set of structural reform measures.
The initial reaction in French debt markets was quite muted, with
yields on French long-term debt little changed. They are now up by 5
basis points to 2.12%. Spain's Treasury has placed 4.9bn in
12 and 18 month bills, well ahead of the 4.5bn expected, even if the
bid-to-cover ratio for the 1 year debt on offer fell to 2.1 from 2.71.
Travel stocks lead gains
EasyJet
is trading at five year highs today following its latest yearly results
and after announcing its decision to more than double its dividend
payout. Credit Suisse is down after announcing the reorganization of its investment bank, which it will merge with its asset management unit. Fiat is down 3% following a UBS downgrade.
From a sector stand-point the best performers now on the DJ Stoxx 600
now are: Travel (1.35%), Chemicals (0.46%) and Industrial goods and
services (0.39%). Sharp drop in Dutch consumer confidence
French car orders rose by 6% in May. German producer prices were flat versus the previous month in October (Consensus: 0.1%). Dutch consumer confidence dropped to -37 points in November, after -32 in the previous month (Consensus: -35). Switzerland's trade surplus rose to 2.8bn Swiss francs in October, versus 1.9bn francs in September.
Crude futures back off a little
The euro/dollar is now at 1.2812, up by 0.25% on the day. Front month Brent crude futures are now down by 0.125 dollars to the 111.56 dollar mark on the ICE. |
US Market Report |
Stocks Nearly Flat On The Heels Of Mixed Catalysts
Stocks
have turned in a lackluster performance over the course of the trading
day on Tuesday after ending the previous session substantially higher. A
mixed batch of news has contributed to the choppy trading on Wall
Street.
After seeing initial weakness, the major averages have climbed back near the unchanged line. While the Dow remains down 5.18 points or less than a tenth of a percent at 12,790.78, the Nasdaq is up 2.61 points or 0.1 percent at 2,918.68 and the S&P 500 is up 1.87 points or 0.1 percent at 1,388.76.
The early weakness on Wall Street was
partly due to news that Moody's Investors Service downgraded France's
government bond rating by one notch to Aa1 from Aaa. The ratings agency
added that the outlook remains negative.
Moody's said France's
long-term economic growth outlook is negatively affected by multiple
structural challenges and said the fiscal outlook is uncertain as a
result of the deteriorating economic prospects.
Nonetheless,
selling pressure remained subdued following the release of a report from
the Commerce Department showing an unexpected increase in U.S. housing
starts.
The report said housing starts climbed 3.6 percent to a
seasonally adjusted annual rate of 894,000 in October, reaching their
highest level in over four years.
While the markets have
subsequently recovered from the initial downward move, lingering
uncertainty about the looming fiscal cliff has limited the upside for
the markets.
Among individual stocks, shares of Hewlett-Packard
have moved sharply lower on the day, with the PC giant currently down by
10.4 percent after hitting a ten-year low.
The loss by HP comes
after the company reported better than expected adjusted fourth quarter
earnings but revealed an $8.8 billion charge related to serious
accounting improprieties at newly acquired Autonomy Corp.
Consumer electronic retailer Best Buy is
also posting a notable loss after reporting third quarter earnings that
came in well below analyst estimates. After also hitting a ten-year
low, shares of Best Buy are down by 10.8 percent.
Meanwhile,
shares of Krispy Kreme Doughnuts have surged up by 21 percent after the
doughnut maker reported better than expected third quarter results and
provided upbeat guidance. Krispy Kreme reached its highest intraday
level in over a year earlier in the session. |
Broker Tips |
Broker tips: London Stock Exchange, easyJet, Debenhams
UBS has said that it still sees 'attractive diversification' and upside potential in the long term at market operator London Stock Exchange (LSE), but has maintained its 'neutral' rating on the shares for now.
The broker said: "We view LSE's diversification away from volume
related revenue streams and the addition of index, technology and post
trade services as starting to show encouraging signs of success
(contract wins at FTSE, technology sales and small development in new
asset classes). We also see some upside from cost control in the longer
run. However we believe that this upside is fully reflected in the
shares, we reiterate our 'neutral' rating." Nomura has reiterated its 'buy' rating and 650p target for budget airline easyJet after the firm met expectations with its full-year figures on Tuesday.
"We recognise potential upside could come from allocated seating, yield
management improvements and ongoing network developments," the broker
said. Seymour Pierce has lowered its recommendation for High Street department store Debenhams from 'hold' to 'reduce', saying that the stock's massive surge over the past year has been unwarranted.
"We do not believe that Debenhams' recent results and outlook supports
the 111% share price rally since September 2011," the broker said.
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