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| London Market Report | | FTSE 100 | Euronext | Dax perf | CAC 40 | | | | | Please click on the images to view our interactive charts | | London open: Stocks down for sixth day on Ukraine, China fears - Ukraine crisis steps up a gear - Analysts cut forecasts for China - US lifts ban on BP GoM contracts - Financials gain, miners fall techMARK 2,757.98 -1.04% FTSE 100 6,525.28 -0.43% FTSE 250 16,032.04 -0.95% UK stocks were suffering losses again on Friday, falling for the sixth straight day, as heightened concerns about the crisis in Ukraine and fears over economic growth in China continued to weigh on sentiment. The FTSE 100, which fell to a five-week low on Thursday, was trading 0.4% lower at 6,525 early on. The UK index dropped 1% to 6,553.78 yesterday, is worst closing level since February 5th. US indices suffered their worst declines in five weeks yesterday while Asian markets dropped overnight "as risk-averse investors pull their positions and seek safe havens due to the flared up issues that surround Ukraine and the slowdown in China", said Financial Sales Trader Sam Fox from Spreadex. Geopolitical tensions in Ukraine have escalated on the back of reports that Moscow is stepping up its military presence on the country's borders ahead of the Crimea referendum this weekend that could see the region vote to become part of the Russian Federation. US President Barack Obama met Ukraine's interim Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk at the White House yesterday. Obama said that "the international community - the European Union and others - will be forced to apply a cost to Russia's violations of international law and its encroachments on Ukraine". Turning to China, a whole range of analysts have downgraded their growth estimates for the Asian powerhouse in recent days, including those at JPMorgan, Bank of America, UBS and Nomura. Amid tightening Chinese credit conditions that spooked global markets earlier in the week, data out Thursday showed that growth in industrial production, retail sales and fixed asset investments all eased last month. Growth concerns were also compounded yesterday after Chinese Premier Li Keqiang warned that defaults on bonds and other financial products in the future are "unavoidable". BP, financials gain; miners fall Oil giant BP announced that it has entered into an administrative agreement with the US Environmental Protection Agency which resolves the issues related to the suspension, debarment and disqualification of BP following the Deepwater Horizon accident and oil spill. As such, the group became eligible to enter into new contracts with the US government, including new deepwater leases in the Gulf of Mexico, giving shares a lift this morning. Financial stocks were performing well this morning with HSBC, Barclays, Standard Chartered and RBS all registering small gains. Mining stocks were leading the downside on the back ongoing concerns over China with Rio Tinto and Antofagasta among the worst performers. AstraZeneca was lower after JPMorgan Cazenove downgraded the pharmaceuticals group from 'neutral' to 'underweight', while engineering IMI was lifted from 'hold' to 'buy' by Societe Generale. |
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| FTSE 100 - Risers Sainsbury (J) (SBRY) 312.10p +2.36% IMI (IMI) 1,435.00p +1.27% SABMiller (SAB) 2,800.50p +0.77% HSBC Holdings (HSBA) 601.60p +0.74% RSA Insurance Group (RSA) 93.20p +0.32% BP (BP.) 479.95p +0.30% Unilever (ULVR) 2,362.00p +0.30% Tesco (TSCO) 299.60p +0.28% Diageo (DGE) 1,809.50p +0.19% Barclays (BARC) 236.05p +0.17% FTSE 100 - Fallers Aberdeen Asset Management (ADN) 367.90p -2.34% Associated British Foods (ABF) 2,796.00p -2.31% Petrofac Ltd. (PFC) 1,323.00p -2.22% CRH (CRH) 1,635.00p -2.10% Persimmon (PSN) 1,283.00p -1.84% Burberry Group (BRBY) 1,403.00p -1.75% Aviva (AV.) 507.00p -1.74% Rio Tinto (RIO) 3,107.00p -1.74% Ashtead Group (AHT) 888.00p -1.72% London Stock Exchange Group (LSE) 1,892.00p -1.71% FTSE 250 - Risers Rank Group (RNK) 137.00p +2.62% African Barrick Gold (ABG) 265.10p +2.36% Domino's Pizza Group (DOM) 524.50p +1.55% Hansteen Holdings (HSTN) 105.80p +0.76% Grainger (GRI) 230.00p +0.66% Spirent Communications (SPT) 97.55p +0.46% International Public Ltd. (INPP) 129.80p +0.39% Hiscox Ltd (HSX) 686.00p +0.37% Capital & Counties Properties (CAPC) 356.80p +0.37% BH Global Ltd. GBP Shares (BHGG) 1,214.00p +0.33% FTSE 250 - Fallers Bank of Georgia Holdings (BGEO) 2,191.00p -7.36% Evraz (EVR) 53.10p -4.92% Perform Group (PER) 255.00p -4.71% Ocado Group (OCDO) 481.30p -4.22% Entertainment One Limited (ETO) 326.80p -4.02% Kentz Ltd. (KENZ) 710.50p -3.27% ICAP (IAP) 392.50p -2.94% Foxtons Group (FOXT) 376.90p -2.86% Man Group (EMG) 103.00p -2.83% |
| UK Event Calendar | Friday March 14 INTERIMS Wetherspoon (J.D.) INTERIM DIVIDEND PAYMENT DATE Jupiter Primadona Growth Trust, Penna Consulting QUARTERLY PAYMENT DATE Carnival, Duet Real Estate Finance Ltd, Energy XXI (Bermuda) (DI) INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ANNOUNCEMENTS Consumer Price Index (GER) (07:00) Producer Price Index (US) (12:30) U. of Michigan Confidence (Prelim) (US) (13:55) GMS Range Resources Ltd. (DI) FINALS Tribal Group ANNUAL REPORT Herald Inv Trust, Norsk Hydro ASA, Senior IMSS SThree AGMS Henderson Diversified Income Ltd., LG Chem Ltd GDS (Reg S), LG Electronics Inc GDS (Reg S), Posco ADS (Level II), Samsung C&T Corp. GDR FINAL DIVIDEND PAYMENT DATE Future, JPMorgan Russian Securities, Octopus Eclipse VCT 1, Zytronic |
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| Europe Market Report | | FTSE 100 | Euronext | Dax perf | CAC 40 | | | | | | Europe open: Stocks fall as US and Russia hold talks on Ukraine - US and Russia meet in London - German inflation rises in line - Banks lower forecast for Chinese economic growth FTSE 100: -0.32% DAX: -0.75% CAC 40: -0.70% FTSE MIB: -0.27% IBEX 35: -0.62% Stoxx 600: -0.62% European stocks declined as the US and Russia prepared for key talks on Ukraine in London. US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov will meet today ahead of referendum in Crimea on Sunday. US President Barack Obama has said the referendum on Crimea leaving Ukraine to join Russia will not be internationally recognised. Kerry is expected to warn such a move could prompt concerted US and EU sanctions. In other developments, Russia launched new military exercises near its border with Ukraine yesterday involving more than 8,000 troops and large artillery units such as rocket launchers and anti-tank weapons. German inflation German inflation rose by 1.2% year-on-year in February, in line with expectations. Month-on-month consumer prices gained 0.55. Meanwhile, Bank of America Corp., UBS, JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Nomura Holdings lowered their forecasts for Chinese economic growth in 2014 following the release of a batch of weak data this week. Reports yesterday showed factory output eased and retail sales increased at the slowest rate for the period since 2004. Later on attention will turn to the release of the University of Michigan's US consumer confidence index which is expected to rise to 82 in March from 81.6 a month earlier. Miners slide on China concerns Mining stocks, including Rio Tinto, edged lower over concerns of slowdown in China. Novo Nordisk slumped following a report that the pharmaceutical company is spending 550m Danish kroner on a new factory in Bagsvaerd, Denmark to be used for developing new diabetes products. Daimler declined after the car maker said it is selling 500m yuan of bonds in China. The euro rose 0.06% to $1.3877. Brent crude futures fell $0.065 to $107.320 per barrel, according to the ICE. |
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| US Market Report | US close: Stocks suffer heavy losses despite strong US data - China, Ukraine concerns outweigh strong US data - S&P 500 turns negative year-to-date - Dollar General disappoints with guidance Dow Jones: -1.42% Nasdaq: -1.46% S&P 500: -1.17% US stocks plunged on Thursday, registering their worst losses in five weeks, as ongoing concerns about China and Ukraine outweighed upbeat data from closer to home. The S&P 500, which had been treading water since hitting a record high last Friday of 1,878.04, dropped 1.2% to 1,846.34 on Thursday, turning negative for the year to date. The index, along with the Dow Jones Industrial Average which fell 1.4%, had their biggest declines since February 3rd. The Nasdaq, meanwhile, finished down 1.5%. Markets had started the session in positive territory after Commerce Department figures showed that retail sales climbed 0.3% on the month in February after a revised 0.6% fall in January. This ended two straight months of declines and came in better than the consensus forecast for an increase of 0.2%. The Labor Department said the number of Americans filing for new claims for jobless benefits last week unexpectedly dropped 9,000 to a seasonally adjusted 315,000. The consensus estimate had been for 330,000 claims. Another report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics revealed US import prices increased by 0.9% on the month in February (1.1% year-on-year). The consensus estimate had been for a gain of 0.6% month-on-month. However, sentiment was quickly dampened by lingering fears of a slowdown in China. Amid tightening Chinese credit conditions that spooked global markets earlier in the week, data out on Thursday showed that growth in industrial production, retail sales and fixed asset investments all eased last month. Meanwhile, tensions between Russia and the West stepped up a gear after US Secretary of State John Kerry told a Senate panel that the US and Europe will take "very serious" actions following the Crimea referendum this weekend if he does not see a sign of a resolution to the crisis. "The worries surrounding Ukraine are gradually heightening, with the Crimean referendum now only three days away. Despite continued attempts from the West to avert the vote, it has become increasingly clear that Russia is unwilling to back down over the region, which will likely be part of the Russian Federation," said Market Analyst Craig Erlam from Alpari. Dollar General misses on Q4 results, guidance Discount retail chain Dollar General dropped after saying that earnings per share in the first quarter would not exceed 74 cents, under the consensus forecast of 81 cents. This came after the company reported a worse-than-expected 1.5% increase in profits in the fourth quarter. The company's Chief Executive Rick Dreiling blamed the "severe winter weather, including many days with significant store closures, an aggressive competitive retail landscape and our customers` uncertainty about spending in the current economic environment". Sector peer Family Dollar Stores also fell on the news. Williams-Sonoma jumped strongly as the seller of cookware and home furnishings predicted sales this year will increase more than expected by analysts. Krispy Kreme Doughnuts gained after boosting its 2015 fiscal year profit-per-share forecast from 71-76 cents to 73-79 cents. Activision Blizzard jumped after Bank of America Corp. raised its rating on the US video-game publisher to 'buy' from 'neutral'. |
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| Newspaper Round Up | Friday newspaper round-up: BP, Daisy Group, RBS Oil giant BP has reached an agreement with the US environmental Protection Agency (EPA) over the firm's 'blacklisting' following the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill. The firm had argued that it lost out on billions of dollars' worth of contracts while at the same time being prevented from new exploration licenses, threatening its dominant position in the region. Those restrictions left the company with a net loss in federal contracts in the last full year of $654m, versus $2.51bn of awards in 2012, The Times reports. The owner of Virgin Media, Liberty Global, has held talks aimed at acquiring Daisy Group, in a transaction thought to be worth at least £500m. Nonetheless, it remains unclear whether a formal bid will finally be launched. Price seems to be the main sticking point, with Daisy holding out for 220p a share, valuing the company at nearly £600m, The Times says. RBS's long-term credit ratings continue to slide. Rating agency Moody's last night cut the lender's own, following the sixth consecutive year of losses at the majority state-owned bank, and warned that further downgrades were a possibility. Nonetheless, a senior credit officer at Moody's added: "Over a longer-term horizon, RBS's restructuring plan should be beneficial for creditors if executed according to plan," The Guardian reports. Philip Hammond, the Defence Secretary, unveiled a £300m contract to refurbish BAE Systems' submarine yard in Cumbria. That is a nod regarding the likelihood that the firm will indeed be given a contract to construct the Royal Navy's next generation of nuclear missile submarines. A decision is expected in 2016, following the elections, according to The Daily Telegraph. Shares of ISS, owned by the family behind Lego, rose by 14% in their stock market debut in Copenhagen. The Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan holds a 26% stake in the company, alongside Kirkbi, the family's investment vehicle. The shares floated at DKr160 (£17.90) and finished at DKr182.7, valuing the company at £3.8bn, The Times writes. When delivering his fifth budget next week Chancellor George Osborne will claim success on the economic front, arguing the country is on the road back to prosperity. He will also warn of the dangers inherent in any backtracking towards the bad old days (and ways) of Labour. That would mean higher taxes, more borrowing and more spending. A highly political statement is thus expected which is hardly surprising given the General Election is just 14 months away, The Daily Mail muses. | | New ADVFN Service - FREE Reports Get your free report on Isa's, Investment Trusts, Funds, Sipps Travel and Cars - FREE and Easy service CLICK HERE To advertise in the Euro Markets Bulletin please contact patrick@advfn.co.uk |
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