Search This Blog

May 23, 2018

Evening Euro Markets Bulletin

 
ADVFN III Evening Euro Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news Wednesday, 23 May 2018 18:01:53
Monitor Quote Charts News CFD's Compare Brokers Free BB
 
When investing matters

All too often market activity causes rash trading decisions. With Back Office Investor you can trade with confidence allowing you to stay in control of your capital investments.

Find out more


London close: Miners, Oil & Gas pace losses as pound retreats
To view the charts please add newsdesk@advfn.com to your contact list
FTSE 100EuronextDax perfCAC 40
Enable images to view FTSE 100 chart Enable images to view Euronext chart Enable images to view Dax perf chart Enable images to view CAC 40 chart
Please click on the images to view our interactive charts

Traders booked some profits on Wednesday, especially among shares of miners and Oil & Gas names, as downbeat remarks from the US President on the prospects for a trade deal with Beijing sent the dollar higher and commodity prices lower.

The FTSE 100 retreated 1.13% to 7,788.44, even though the pound was off by 0.62% versus the US dollar to 1.33519. Against the euro on the other hand, Sterling was 0.01% higher at 1.1404.

Worries about relations between the US and China resurfaced after President Trump said on Tuesday evening that he was not happy with the progress being made on trade talks.

He also said that there is a "very substantial chance" a historic summit with North Korea's Kim Jong-Un next month may not happen.

The US dollar benefited from the heightened risk aversion as a result, triggering a fall a 0.56% fall in front month Brent oil futures to $79.13 a barrel.

To take note of as well, it added to the pain for investors in some emerging markets, especially Turkey.

Also weighing on the pound was data from the Office for National Statistics showing that inflation fell unexpectedly in April, casting further doubt on when the Bank of England will next decide to increase interest rates.

Annual consumer price inflation in Britain eased to 2.4% from 2.5%, official figures showed. The April figure was the weakest since March 2017 and lower than economists' average forecast for inflation to hold steady at 2.5%.

Lower-than-forecast inflation gives the Bank of England further food for thought after its monetary policy committee held off on increasing interest rates in May.

However, Sam Tombs at Pantheon Macroeconomics said he thinks inflation will hold steady in May before jumping to 2.7% in June as consumers endure rises in motor fuel, electricity and natural gas prices, while the MPC's inflation forecasts for 2.5% in June are partly based on forecast only including an $71 oil price, $8 below its current level.

"Provided GDP growth recovers in Q2, June's inflation data likely will be strong enough to persuade a majority of MPC members to vote to raise rates in August, rather than wait until later in the year," Tombs said.

On the other hand, Fabrice Montagne at Barclays Research mused: "Subdued core measures, in particular, highlight the absence of underlying excess momentum in prices and we don't see inflationary risks in stronger wages due to the absorption capacity of higher saving rates and productivity catch up."

In corporate news, reports that Barclays is mulling a possible merger with peers, sent shares inStandard Chartered higher. The Financial Times reported Barclays had been moved to explore deals in response to pressure from activist investor Edward Bramson.

Marks & Spencer was the standout gainer as its proposed revamp of the business trumped a better-than-expected 5.4% fall in annual profits as margins at the retailer's food business were squeezed by the rising cost of ingredients. After including a huge £514m of exceptional costs, mostly related to a £321m provision for the cost of the accelerated store closure programme announced earlier in the week, reported pre-tax profits slumped by 62% to £66m.

Water and sewage group Severn Trent advanced as it increased its dividend 6% after receiving an £80m incentive payment for outperforming on customer 'outcomes', also saying it would invest £100m of savings gained from efficiencies back in the business.

Rio Tinto fell back despite confirming it is in discussions to sell its entire interest in the Grasberg copper mine in Indonesia to Inalum, following reports that it could go for $3.5bn.

Drinks maker Britvic fizzed higher as it posted a jump in interim revenue and earnings and expressed confidence over the rest of the year, although pre-tax profit was dented by £21.6m of costs from its planned business capability programme.

PrimeLocation owner ZPG dipped despite posting a 41% increase in first-half earnings, while Babcock rallied as its full-year earnings beat expectations and Softcat gained as it said full-year results will be ahead of expectations.

On the downside, BBA Aviation was in the red after agreeing to buy fuel and fuel-related services supplier EPIC Fuels for a cash consideration of $88.1m and Bovis Homes fell despite saying that market fundamentals remain strong and total sales for the year are in line with expectations, with pricing strong.

Cathedral City owner Dairy Crest tumbled as it announced plans to raise £69.9m in a 7.7% discounted share placing to fund an expansion of its cheese production facility.

Great Portland Estates was on the back foot even after saying it swung back into an annual profit, while wealth manager St James's Place ticked down as it announced that chairwoman Sarah Bates had decided to retire as chair and as a director of the company. She will be succeeded by Iain Cornish.

In broker note action, Victrex was rated a new 'hold' at HSBC, and Elementis a new 'buy' while IAG was cut to 'reduce' by the same outfit.

Halfords was cut to 'hold' at N+1 Singer. Computacenter was initiated at 'buy' by Stifel and Grainger was cut to 'hold'.


Daily cryptocurrency Tracker 23.5.18: Bitcoin falls below $8,000

The negative momentum continued in the crypto market over the past 24 hours, as all top 10 cryptocurrencies registered losses. At the time of writing, Bitcoin was down more than...

Read More..


Market Status
 
 
change pct
-0.64%
 
cur price
7,826.73
 
change
-50.72
 
 
change pct
-0.41%
 
cur price
21,104.98
 
change
-86.46
 
 
change pct
-0.28%
 
cur price
3,539.64
 
change
-9.84

Top 10 FTSE 100 Risers

# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1Marks & Spencer+3.46%+10.10301.90
2Babcock International Group+3.24%+24.80789.20
3Standard Chartered+2.41%+18.50785.40
4G4S+0.77%+2.10274.50
5Scottish & Southern Energy+0.70%+10.001,437.50
6British American Tobacco+0.61%+23.003,785.50
7Experian+0.59%+11.001,861.00
8Bunzl Plc+0.56%+13.002,317.00
9Severn Trent+0.53%+11.002,071.00
10Imperial Brands+0.49%+13.502,797.00

Top 10 FTSE 100 Fallers

# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1Anglo American-3.39%-65.401,861.00
2Royal Dutch Shell A-2.74%-75.002,664.50
3Royal Dutch Shell B-2.46%-69.502,757.00
4Rio Tinto-2.20%-97.004,318.00
5International Consolidated Airlines Group -2.08%-14.60688.00
6BHP Billiton-2.02%-36.001,743.20
7Antofagasta Plc-2.00%-22.001,076.00
8British Petroleum-1.94%-11.40577.00
9Ashtead Group-1.91%-45.002,317.00
10Glencore-1.83%-7.15382.65

Atlantic Advisory - Share Tips of the Year 2018

Download Our Latest Report Here

Losses can exceed deposits


US open: Stocks fall at the bell as Trump voices dissatisfaction over China trade talks

Trading on Wall Street began on a sombre note on Wednesday amid ongoing geopolitical concerns ahead of the release of the latest Federal Reserve meeting minutes.

At 1440 BST, all major indices were down 0.37% as the Dow dropped to 24,741.54, the S&P 500 fell to 2,714.44 and the Nasdaq bottomed out at 7,351.47.

Stocks ended in the red on Tuesday after President Trump said he was not happy with the progress being made in trade talks between the US and China.

He also said that there is a "very substantial chance" a historic summit with North Korea's Kim Jong-Un next month may not happen.

Konstantinos Anthis, head of research at ADS Securities, said: "Following a remark from US President Donald Trump that the historic meeting with Kim Jong-Un might or might not happen, the dollar is driving higher against the European and commodity currencies while safe-haven assets like the yen and gold are also ticking to the upside."

"The important question is whether this risk-off rally has legs, meaning if we should prepare for a broader re-escalation of geopolitical risks and how this would affect currencies and equities," Anthis added.

Elsewhere, while giving a speech to an anti-abortion group in Washington, Trump hinted that his administration had further tax cuts in store by the end of the year.

Following the Republican Party's $1.5trn tax cut enacted back in December, Trump said on Tuesday that his administration would be "submitting additional tax cuts sometime prior to November".

"It's going to be something very special," the President said.

In corporate news, shares of Tiffany's surged 15.33% in early trade as the jeweller's first-quarter results beat analysts' expectations thanks to strong demand in the US. The company also announced a new $1bn share buyback programme.

Discount store retailer Target lost 4.70% after its first-quarter revenue beat expectations but missed on profits.

Home improvement and appliances retailer Loewes gained 8.63% after the release of its first-quarter results and Tesla gained 0.31% after analysts recommended investors "lean into the fever pitch" of negative sentiment.

Avinger shares rocketed 47% after its Pantheris Lumivascular atherectomy system was granted clearance from the Food and Drug Administration.

On the data front, IHS Markit's manufacturing PMI inched up to 56.6 in May from 56.5 in April, while its services PMI climbed to 55.7 from the 54.6 shown a month earlier.

Economists had predicted manufacturing PMI would be unchanged at its highest level since October 2014 and above the threshold of 50 separating growth from contraction.

Elsewhere, new home sales for April fell, as setbacks seen across the coast and rising borrowing costs and property prices seemed to limit the market's progress, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Single-family home sales declined 1.5% to 662,000 while median sales price increased 0.4% year-on-year to $312,400.

Sales fell 7.9% in the West, while purchases in the Midwest were unchanged and up marginally in the South.

Minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee's meeting earlier this month were set to be released at 1900 BST.

CMC Markets analyst David Madden said, "Last month the US central bank confirmed they were confident the inflation target would be achieved but were less optimistic about growth. Traders are pencilling in an interest rate hike next month, but they remain divided about how many more rate hikes we could see beyond June."


Paradigm Capital are introducing structured real estate assets comprising of fixed income opportunities and managed fund positions

It is increasingly clear the time for tangible assets is looming. Head for portfolio consolidation as opposed to market speculation.

Click to register


Wednesday newspaper round-up: Carillion, BP, Vedanta, Unaoil

The government was too slow to spot mounting financial problems at troubled public sector outsourcing company Carillion, according to a report that reveals the Cabinet Office decided the contractor was not “high risk” even as it neared insolvency. The parliamentary public accounts committee, which produced the report, also warned that Carillion’s collapse indicates that too many public works contracts are concentrated in the hands of a few private firms. - Guardian

UK organisations were handed a record £4.2m in data protection fines last year, up nearly a million pounds from the previous year. As new GDPR laws will see companies risk even larger fines for failing compliance, analysis finds that last year the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) dealt 54 financial penalties in total for breaching current data protection laws. - Telegraph

BP has delayed its plans to drill a fresh well at one of its North Sea gas fields due to concerns that its Iranian partner could put the oil major in breach of looming US sanctions. BP was due to begin new work at the Rhum field but the oil major said it will wait for clarity on the US sanctions before moving ahead. - Telegraph

At least nine protesters were shot dead in southern India yesterday after police opened fire on crowds calling for the permanent closure of a copper smelter controlled by Vedanta, the London-listed miner. Protests in Tuticorin in the state of Tamil Nadu began after a gas leak in 2013 left dozens of people ill. - The Times

Fresh charges have been brought against two people involved in an investigation into allegations of bribery at Unaoil, an oil and gas consultancy business. The Serious Fraud Office said that it had charged Basil Al Jarah and Ziad Akle with conspiracy to pay alleged bribes to secure a £555 million contract to Leighton Contractors Singapore, linked with a scheme to build two oil pipelines in Iraq. - The Times

The United States has taken its first significant step towards a post-Brexit free-trade deal by setting up a committee seeking an “expeditious agreement” with the UK. The Senate UK Trade Caucus, a cross-party congressional committee that was unveiled yesterday, aims to build support in Congress for a US-UK free-trade deal before leading a “unified effort” to turn it into law. - The Times

 

To advertise in the Euro Markets Bulletin please contact advertise@advfn.com


 
 

ADVFN Disclaimer

Although we have sent you this email, ADVFN does not endorse any product or company nor is it responsible for the content of this news bulletin. We have not independently reviewed the information; claims or testimonials provided within the news bulletin and make no guarantee or warranty regarding its content. The opinions and recommendations expressed in this email are not those of ADVFN.


Unsubscribe from ADVFN news bulletin

Registered Office/Accounts Dept:
Suite 27, Essex Technology Centre,
The Gables, Fyfield Road, Ongar,
Essex, CM5 0GA.
Support Tel: 0207 0700 961
Company registered in England and Wales:
Number 2374988

VAT No: GB 549 2130 49
 

No comments:

Post a Comment