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FTSE 100 firmer but off highs, modest gains seen in the US

Tags: rate bank quarter
  • FTSE 100 firmer but off highs, up 18 points
  • Lloyds falls despite strong first quarter profits
  • Modest gains seen in the US ahead of rate decision

1.30pm: Here’s a recap of the top risers on the junior market today

Mirriad Advertising PLC (AIM:MIRI, OTCQX:MMDDF) saw its shares rocket more than 200% higher as it announced a collaboration with Microsoft to build a new API to enable the use of the AIM-firm’s ad technology for “dynamic insertions by media partners”.

“Partnering with Microsoft is an important milestone for the further development of our in-content advertising platform, proposition and business,” said chief executive Stephan Beringer.

TI Fluid Systems PLC (LSE:TIFS), a global leader in automotive fluid systems, saw its shares surge 17% higher in early trade on Wednesday after the first Quarter got off to what CEO Hans Dieltjens described as an “encouraging start”.

Braveheart Investment Group PLC (AIM:BRH) shares jumped 25% after it said the CX300 rapid test instrument being developed by its Paraytec subsidiary will be marketed for sale to researchers after passing independent testing for CE marking and successfully completing trials at the University of Sheffield.

SRT Marine Systems PLC (LSE:SRT) shares rose 3% after the company announced the completion and sign-off of Phase 1 of a substantial national coast guard maritime surveillance system contract.

The project, worth a total of £40mln and announced in January 2022, is for the delivery of the first stage of a planned national maritime surveillance system which will be built up in a series of contracts over several years.

1.00pm: Modest gains seen in the US ahead of rate call, jobs data

Wall Street is expected to open modestly higher as investors look to the US Federal Reserve’s rate decision later today amid predictions that rate setters will deliver a 25-basis point interest rate hike as they look to rein in inflationary pressures.

Beyond monetary policy, investors are also looking to the upcoming non-farm payrolls numbers on Friday before taking on new positions.

Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 46 points in pre-market trading, while those for the broader S&P 500 rose 10.2 points and contracts for the Nasdaq-100 also rose 37.5 points.

“Markets are currently pricing an 85% probability of a 25-basis point move today, the hope for equity bulls is that this move maybe the final rate increase in this cycle,” TickMill Group market analyst Patrick Munnelly said.

With that in mind, upcoming data will be key, with today’s ADP employment report like to provide some insight.

“The focus is squarely on this evening’s FOMC rate decision, however, ahead of the headline event, investors will get some insight into the employment landscape ahead of Friday’s non-farm payrolls release,” added Munnelly.

He noted that the ADP employment survey data is expected to reveal a small increase to 150,000 from 145,000 in the previous month. 

Also out today is the US ISM service sector index which will give an important snapshot of the economy.

12.25pm: Barclays faces climate protest at AGM

The disruption at the Barclays AGM comes as a coalition of investors, coordinated by ShareAction, call on the Bank to end financing new oil and gas fields, in line with other major banks’ policies such as HSBC and Lloyds Banking Group. 

In a statement to be read out on behalf of investors including Brunel Pension Partnership, Candriam, and Northern LGPS at the AGM, the bank, will also be urged to introduce restrictions for companies it finances which are themselves expanding oil and gas extraction. Barclays are presently the second biggest European provider of financing to oil and gas companies with expansion plans.  

Jeanne Martin, Head of Banking Programme at ShareAction, said: “Despite taking some important steps forward in the past year, such as cutting oil sands financing, Barclays has failed to fully match its oil and gas policy to its own net zero goal. This despite clear warnings from the International Energy Agency that there is no room for new oil and gas fields if we want to keep global warming below a 1.5C temperature rise. 

“As a major international bank, Barclays’ financing decisions will have a significant impact on the world’s chances for reaching net zero by 2050 and averting the worst effects of the climate crisis, such as extreme weather events and flooding.” 

Barclays chairman Nigel Higgins has tried to outline the bank’s own climate commitments, despite being disrupted by a rather impolite view of his comments.

He said the bank had “significantly enhanced” its climate disclosures and had committed to ending thermal coal financing in the OECD and EU countries by 2023. He added Barclays had “substantially exited” the carbon-heavy oil sands sector, while increasing its financing for green energy.

However, Higgins said Barclays would not abandon the fossil fuel sector entirely: “It is our view – and I know that not everybody agrees – that the state of energy provision today, and the questions of energy poverty and energy security, mean that we cannot simply abandon this sector”.

12.02am: Climate protestors disrupt Barclays AGM

It’s all happening at the Barclays AGM. Climate protesters have disrupted chairman Nigel Higgins, less than 5 minutes into the meeting with a rather different rendition of the Spice Girls’ hit single “Stop Right Now’.

The agitators have changed the lyrics to the song: ““Stop right now, no more oil and gas, stop burning fossil fuels and end this madness… hey you burning up the earth, gotta stop it now baby we have had enough…do do do do…you dirty, dirty bank”.

One protestor yelled: “You are the worst fossil fuel funder in Europe in a climate crisis”

11.22am: Zoopla sees soft landing for UK housing market

UK house price annual growth slowed again to 3% in April to £259,700 for an average home, data from Zoopla showed, but it added that the “worst of the monthly house price falls is now behind us”.  

Last month prices rose at 4.1% on an annual basis, while a year ago homebuying inflation was 9.3%, the property website’s latest House Price Index revealed.    

Zoopla said that “prices are continuing to register modest quarter-on-quarter price falls of up to 0.7% across all regions and countries of the UK.”   

“There are early signs that the level of monthly price reductions are now reducing and the main adjustment in pricing is behind us.”  

The report added that prices are likely to register low negative annual growth by the summer and end the year falling by 1%, in what it calls “a soft landing for the market”.  

It said demand for homes hit their highest level this year after the Easter break and is 14% higher than 2019 levels but still 42% down on a year ago — as the market surged in 2022 on the back of a lack of supply, the post-pandemic ‘race for space and lower mortgage rates at the start of the year.  

The surveu showed first-time buyers are increasingly favouring smaller properties as they adjust their expectations amid higher mortgage rates and look to get away from rapidly rising rents.

10.46am: New ONS tool shows just how fast food prices are rising

As if you didn’t know already but figures from the Office for National Statistics have showed the price of cheese, milk and eggs rose by more than 30% in the UK in the 12 months to March. 

The ONS has released a new shopping prices comparison tool that tracks changes in prices which revealed the price of hard cheese rose the fastest at 44%.

The prices of eggs and milk rose at annual rates of 32% and 39% respectively, more than three times the headline inflation rate of 10.1%.

The price of staples such as a tin of baked beans increased 39% while pasta jumped 24%.

The price of takeaway burgers and fish and chips rose by nearly 20% over the same period.

10.00am: Oil price falls further

The oil prices fell around further 2% after tumbling 5% yesterday as concerns of slowing economic growth fuel worries of slowing demand.

A barrel of Brent crude fetched US$73.94, a fall of 1.8%, while West Texas Intermediate prices dipped 1.7% to US$70.40/barrel.

Concerns that the US economy may be heading into recesion were heightened yesterday after a survey showed a sharp in job vacancies sugesting the previously resilient US jobs market was cracking.

Investors fear a further rise in US interest rates – expected today – will slow growth further.

Adding to the nervous are jitters of a US debt default as talks on the US debt ceiling appear no closer to being resolved.

Elsewhere, European natural gas prices hit their lowest level in 21 months. 

Dutch front-month futures, Europe’s gas pricing benchmark, fell 2.25% to EUR36.69 per megawatt hour amid record imports of liquified natural gas on the continent. Prices have fallen about 88% from their peak last August in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Imports of LNG into western Europe jumped to a record 10.6 million metric tons in April, driven by shipments into France, Belgium and the Netherlands with the US supplying about 50% of the fuel, while Russian cargoes accounted for about 10%.

UK gas prices slipped 2.2% to 83.5p per therm, a level not seen since July 2021 and down almost 90% from last year’s peak of 800p, pressured by sluggish demand and concerns about a supply glut.

9.36am: Pfizer to start selling Haleon shares

Alongside its trading update, Haleon PLC (LSE:HLN, NYSE:HLN) was in focus after comments from Pfizer yesterday which said it would begin offloading its 32% stake in the consumer health business as it focuses on reducing debt linked to its US$43bn acquisition of Seagen and boosting returns to shareholders.

Dave Denton, Pfizer’s chief financial officer, told the Financial Times the company would begin selling down the holding within months in a “slow and methodical” manner so it does not undermine Haleon’s market valuation.

“We love the Haleon business but it’s not strategic,” said Denton.

GSK and Pfizer combined their consumer healthcare businesses in a joint venture in 2019 that sat within GSK before it was spun off via a listing on the London Stock Exchange.

The listing created the world’s biggest pureplay consumer health company with a valuation of £30.5bn. The transaction left GSK and Pfizer holding 13.5% and 32% of the shares, respectively

9.20am: RyanAir enjoys third busiest month ever

Ryanair Holdings PLC (LSE:RYA), the Dublin-based budget airline, carried 16.0mln passengers in April, up 13% from 14.2ln in April last year and up 27% from March this year making it the third busiest month ever.

This is only the third time it’s flown at least 16mln passengers in a month; last July and August it carried 16.8mln and 16.9mln passengers respectively.

The airline said this April was hurt by strikes by French air traffic controllers, resulting in more than 650 flights with 118,000 passengers being cancelled, while April last year was hurt by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The load factor last month was 94%, up from 91% a year before and 93% from March. 

8.53am: FTSE firms, banks steady after US nerves

The FTSE 100 is holding in the green but investors will have one eye on the US rate call after the close today while the European Central Bank makes its latest monetary rate decision tomorrow.

Susannah Streeter at Hargreaves Lansdown said: “Caution is set to take centre stage ahead of the Fed’s interest rate decision later, as investors mull what’s ahead for the mighty US economy.” 

“Worries have ratcheted up again that a maelstrom of problems are lurking within regional banks and that there could be another breakage as interest rates are set to be hiked again.”

Those concerns saw shares in a number of US regional banks come under pressure in the US on Tuesday.

The mood amongst UK banks was brighter as strong results from Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LSE:LLOY).

First quarter profit from the high street lender topped City expectations and shares held small gains of 0.2%. Shares in Barclays and NatWest also held modest gains.

Matt Britzman, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown said: “Lloyds continues the trend of major UK banks outperforming analyst consensus as impairment charges set aside for loan defaults were lower than feared.”

“Lloyds is a good barometer for the overall health of the UK consumer and its smaller businesses, and they’re proving remarkably resilient in the face of mounting cost pressures.” 

HSBC rose 1.2% after positive comments on its results yesterday.

Deutsche Bank increased its price target to 1,000p from 880p and reiterated a buy rating.

Analyst Robert Noble said: “HSBC offers consistent, unparalleled capital return over the next three years-greater, we believe, than the market expects.”

HSBC is a Top Pick among European banks he said.

8.37am: RS slips 4% as CFO quits after relationship with colleague

Shares in RS Group PLC (LSE:RS1) slipped around 4% after it announced that David Egan has resigned as Chief Financial Officer and will leave the business with immediate effect.

Egan left the business after disclosing a “personal relationship with a colleague,” in which he said there “have been some shortcomings of judgment on my part and my actions have fallen short of the high standards expected of RS leadership.”

Rona Fairhead, Chair, said: “Following a thorough review, the board has accepted David’s resignation and in stepping down he recognises the importance of leaders setting and abiding by exemplary standards.”

Jane Titchener will take over as Interim CFO until a permanent replacement CFO is appointed.

RS said there is no change to profit expectations from that reported in the recent trading update published in April.

8.15am: FTSE 100 bounces, Flutter rises on strong trading

The FTSE 100 bounced back strongly on Wednesday after heavy losses yesterday as investors digest another slew of trading updates and await the latest monetary policy call in the US after the London market closes.

At 8.15am London’s lead index stood at 7,818.22, up 45.19 points, or 0.58% while the FTSE 250 rallied to 19,359.05, up 44.82 points, or 0.23%.

Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LSE:LLOY) reported first quarter results with the backdrop of renewed nervousness in the US banking sector after a number of regional banks came under pressure despite the rescue deal for First Republic Bank (NYSE:FRC).

But the high street lender beat City expectations reporting a 46% increase in first quarter profit as net income jumped continuing to benefit from the higher interest environment.

The FTSE 100-listed bank said net income climbed 15% to £4.7bn in the three months to March 31 from £4.03bn a year prior while statutory pre-tax profit jumped to £2.26bn from £1.54bn. Analysts had forecast profit of £1.95bn.

Charlie Nunn, Group Chief Executive said: “The group has delivered a solid financial performance in the first quarter of 2023, with strong net income and capital generation, alongside resilient observed asset quality.”

Richard Hunter at interactive investor, commented “Lloyds has brought down the curtain on the quarterly banking reporting season with another show of strength, as it breezed past expectations on virtually all measures.”

Gary Greenwood at Shore Capital said the results “show better than expected earnings driven with beats in most line items other than net interest income.”

He noted a small deposit outflow during the period, mirroring that seen by NatWest last week, “but this is nothing to be concerned about, in our view.”

He thinks with guidance left unchanged there may only be “a slight nudge up to full year forecasts.”

Shares fell 0.9%.

Shares in Flutter Entertainment rose 1.8% after a “very strong performance” in the US drove a 46% increase in first quarter revenue.

The owner of FanDuel, Paddy Power and Betfair said total revenue rose to £2.4bn with Sports revenue up 53% to £1.5bn and Gaming revenue up 35% to £916mln.

The FTSE 100-listed firm pointed out the average monthly players of 12.3mln were up 30%.

But shares in Haleon PLC (LSE:HLN, NYSE:HLN) slipped 3.4% as the company said profits grew more slowly in the first quarter of 2023 amid higher costs and unhelpful currency swings.

The Voltarol and Centrum manufacturer remained confident of its organic sales guidance for the full year, towards the upper end of its 4-6% range, as revenue grew 9.9% in the first three months of the year.

Total sales were up 13.7% to £3bn for the quarter, mostly from price rises at 7.1% and volume/mix at 2.8%.

The FTSE 100-listed company grew adjusted operating profit 9.5% to £691mln or 3.3% at constant currency rates, down from 13.8% and 5.9% respectively for the whole of last year.

7.50am: Strong US performance boosts Flutter

Flutter Entertainment PLC (LSE:FLTR) said a “very strong performance” in the US drove a 46% increase in first quarter revenue.

The owner of FanDuel, Paddy Power and Betfair said total revenue rose to £2.4bn with Sports revenue up 53% to £1.5bn and Gaming revenue up 35% to £916mln.

The FTSE 100-listed firm pointed out the average monthly players of 12.3mln were up 30%.

In the US, revenue soared 92% including sportsbook revenue growth of 147% as the business took a 50% share of the sports market in the quarter, up 14 percentage points year-on-year, while iGaming revenue growth was 43% with market share up to 23% from 21% in the fourth quarter.

Flutter said the division remained “firmly on track for full year profitability in 2023.”

Outside of the US and pro forma revenue growth was 8%, driven by continued positive momentum in UK & Ireland (+17%) and good growth in International (+6%), while performance in Australia (-4%) remained resilient against challenging comparatives with good customer growth.

The company expects the additional US listing late in the fourth quarter, it said.

Reflecting on the recent White Paper in the UK, Chief Executive Peter Jackson said: “The changes will bring consistency to safer gambling protections for customers and make responsible play a priority across all operators, which we strongly support.” 

7.30am: Lloyds’ first quarter profit tops expectations

Strong results from Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LSE:LLOY) which beat City expectations reporting a 46% increase in first quarter profit as net income jumped continuing to benefit from the higher interest environment.

The high street lender said net income climbed 15% to £4.7bn in the three months to March 31 from £4.03bn a year prior while statutory pre-tax profit jumped to £2.26bn from £1.54bn. Analysts had forecast profit of £1.95bn.

Underlying net interest income rose 20% to £3.54bn primarily driven by a stronger banking net interest margin of 3.22% in the quarter unchanged from the fourth quarter but 54 basis points higher than the first quarter of 2022.

Other income of £1.3 billion, was 6% higher year-on-year, while operating costs increased 5% to of £2.2bn reflecting higher planned strategic investment, cost of new businesses and inflationary effects.

Charlie Nunn, Group Chief Executive said: “The group has delivered a solid financial performance in the first quarter of 2023, with strong net income and capital generation, alongside resilient observed asset quality.”

The FTSE 100-listed bank said asset quality remains resilient with an underlying impairment charge of £0.2bn and asset quality ratio of 22 basis points continuing to reflect robust observed credit trends.

Loans and advances to customers fell £2.6bn to £452.3bn while customer deposits of £473.1 billion were down £2.2bn including a reduction in Retail current account balances of £3.5bn  partly driven by seasonal customer outflows, including tax payments, higher spend and a more competitive market.

This was partly offset by Commercial Banking deposit increases of £2.7bn.

The bank’s CET1 ratio of 14.1% remained ahead of the ongoing target of 12.5%.

Looking ahead and the company continues to expect: banking net interest margin to be greater than 305 basis points; operating costs to be c.£9.1bn; asset quality ratio to be c.30 basis points; the return on tangible equity to be c.13% and capital generation to be c.175 basis points.

7.00am: FTSE 100 expected to bounce after Monday’s losses

Good morning. The FTSE 100 is expected to open higher despite some hefty losses in the US as investors await the latest call on interest rates by the US Federal Reserve.

Spread betting companies are calling London’s lead index up by around 23 points.

The US central bank is widely expected to raise interest rates by 25 basis points to a range of 5% to 5.25%, its highest level in nearly 16 years, when it concludes its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday.

Nervousness about the health of the US banking sector and weak job vacancies figures sent US stocks lower ahead of the FOMC meeting.

Regional banking shares came under renewed pressure despite the rescue deal for First Republic. Shares in PacWest, seen as one of the weakest of the midsized regional banks, was briefly halted for volatility and closed down 27.8%, while Western Alliance fell 15.1%.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 367.17 points, or 1.1%, at 33,684.53. The S&P 500 slipped 48.29 points, or 1.2%, at 4,119.58 while the Nasdaq Composite shed 132.09 points, or 1.1%, at 12,080.51.

In Asia, the Nikkei 225 and Shanghai Composite were closed. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng was down 1.8%.

Back in London, and the early focus will be results from Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LSE:LLOY) and trading statements from Flutter Entertainment and Barratt Developments.

The post FTSE 100 firmer but off highs, modest gains seen in the US appeared first on CNN World Today.



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