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May 18, 2018

Morning Euro Markets Bulletin

 
ADVFN  Morning Euro Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news Friday, 18 May 2018 09:31:00
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London open: FTSE ticks lower as investors pause for breath
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London stocks ticked just a touch lower at the open on Friday as investors paused for breath following a record closing high in the previous session.

At 0840 BST, the FTSE 100 was down 0.1% to 7,780.87 after closing up 0.7% at 7,787.97 on Thursday, which was a record close and just below the intraday high of 7,792.56 seen in January, as energy shares benefited from a jump in oil prices.

Spreadex analyst Connor Campbell said: "Whether or not the FTSE can mount a charge on 7,800 may be down to two things this Friday: Brent crude and sterling. The former is sitting at $79.50 per barrel following the latest renewal of the US-China trade war fears; a return to $80 could give the FTSE the fuel to beat its own intraday record.

"As for the pound, if the currency sees even a semi-substantial slide against either the dollar, where it is just above $1.35, and the euro, where it is down 0.1%, then that may be enough to push the UK index over the edge."

Stocks in the US finished slightly lower on Thursday after President Trump said trade negotiations with China are unlikely to succeed.

"Trump feels that China and the EU have become soiled when it comes to trading with the US, and they have gotten their way for so long they won’t be willing to change. This could be a ploy by the US President to lower expectations at home, and he may not get as good as a deal that he wants. The reaction from traders wasn’t enormous and this suggests that dealers aren’t too concerned yet," said CMC Markets analyst David Madden.

In corporate news, AstraZeneca was under the cosh as the pharmaceutical giant's first-quarter revenues and earnings came in lower than expected due to investment in new drug launches and erosion of sales for its Crestor statin drug.

Hikma Pharmaceuticals slipped despite hailing an "encouraging start" to the year and reiterating its full-year guidance.

Rio Tinto fell after saying it had been given the green light to run driverless trains at its iron ore business in Western Australia, while homeware retailer Dunelm was in the red as it appointed Laura Carr - currently group financial controller of Compass Group - as its new chief financial officer.

John Laing Infrastructure was a smidgen lower even as it posted 1.8% growth in its underlying portfolio value for the three months to the end of March.

Lloyds Banking ticked up after announcing the sale of its Irish residential mortgage portfolio to Barclays for £4bn.

In small caps, Carpetright rallied after announcing plans for a £60m placing and open offer to fund additional costs associated with implementing its CVA, repay its £12.5m interim loan and fund the group's capex plans.

In broker note action, Smith & Nephew was hit by a downgrade to 'hold' at Commerzbank, but outsourcer Capita was higher after an upgrade to 'overweight' at JPMorgan.

DS Smith was lifted to 'outperform' at Davy, while Ocado was upgraded to 'hold' at HSBC a day after signing a deal with US grocery chain Kroger.

888 was cut to 'neutral' by JPMorgan and Grainger was downgraded to 'equal-weight' at Barclays, while BTG was knocked down to 'hold' at Investec.


Market Analysis 18/05/2018

Trade MarketsYour capital is at risk'Trade war' turns to 'trade talks'The long standing power struggle between the USA and China has gradually turned a softer note, as both...

Read More..


Market Status
 
 
change pct
-0.19%
 
cur price
7,773.36
 
change
-14.61
 
 
change pct
-0.22%
 
cur price
20,972.53
 
change
-46.91
 
 
change pct
-0.64%
 
cur price
3,497.00
 
change
-22.46

Top 10 FTSE 100 Risers

# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1Smurfit Kappa Group+1.62%+48.003,014.00
2Paddy Power Betfair+1.43%+120.008,525.00
3Std Life Aber+0.93%+3.40370.70
4NMC Health+0.93%+34.003,708.00
5Relx Group+0.85%+13.501,610.50
6Unilever Plc+0.76%+31.004,131.50
7Burberry Group+0.70%+13.501,941.50
8Hargreaves Lansdown+0.64%+12.501,953.50
9London Stock Exchange+0.62%+28.004,526.00
10Imperial Brands+0.56%+15.502,773.00

Top 10 FTSE 100 Fallers

# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1Johnson Matthey-3.10%-110.003,433.00
2AstraZeneca -2.19%-117.005,228.00
3Vodafone Group-1.63%-3.20192.84
4Smith & Nephew-1.28%-17.001,310.50
5Merlin Entertainments Plc-1.08%-4.00367.40
6Admiral Group-0.82%-16.001,929.00
7BHP Billiton-0.78%-13.601,736.00
8Rio Tinto-0.75%-32.504,325.00
9Antofagasta Plc-0.74%-8.001,073.50
10United Utilities-0.71%-5.60780.80

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Crypto Currencies
#1 Bitcoin (BTC)
change
+0.60%
mktcap
138.42B
volume
7.08T
price
8,109.25
#2 Ethereum (ETH)
change
+1.49%
mktcap
67.74B
volume
14.7T
price
680.00
#3 Ripple (XRP)
change
+1.67%
mktcap
26.46B
volume
6243.43T
price
0.67
#4 Bitcoin Cash / BCC (BCH)
change
+0.79%
mktcap
20.74B
volume
5.83T
price
1,207.34
#5 EOS (EOS)
change
+4.69%
mktcap
11.06B
volume
289.69T
price
12.85

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US close: Markets close in the red as bond yields remain stubbornly high

US stocks finished in the red on Thursday, with Wall Street investors keeping a close eye on still-elevated bond yields, trade talks with China and a Dow being weighed down by the likes of Walmart and Cisco Systems.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended the session down 0.22% at 24,713.98, the S&P 500 was off 0.09% at 2,720.13, and the Nasdaq 100 finished 0.41% below the waterline at 6,901.63.

“The Dow Jones wasn't ready to properly join in with the day’s gains. Investors, seemingly put off by the strength of the dollar, fears over a US/China trade war, and the ongoing concerns over Trump pulling out of the Iranian nuclear deal, only sent the Dow 0.1% higher, leaving the index just shy of 24800,” noted SpreadEx financial analyst Connor Campbell earlier.

Elsewhere, oil prices were in focus as Brent crude hit $80 a barrel for the first time since 2014 after France's Total threatened to withdraw from its large Iran gas field deal following the US decision to exit the Iran nuclear deal.

In the background, the US and China were set to begin their second round of talks aimed at averting a trade war.

"Interestingly … Peter Navarro won’t be the US key negotiator; instead, Steven Mnuchin, Wilbur Ross, and Robert Lighthizer will take the lead," said Hussein Sayed, chief market strategist at FXTM.

"Trump seems to have changed course with China, first in his attempt to save ZTE, and now by side-lining Peter Navarro.

“It's still difficult to predict how the negotiations will end, but we'll surely be in a better position compared to a few months ago.”

Meanwhile, in bond markets, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note remained high at 3.11%, having risen to a seven-year peak a day earlier.

On the data front, New applications for US jobless benefits grew more than expected last week, although the number of Americans on unemployment benefits dropped to its lowest level since 1973.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits rose 11,000 to 222,000 for the week ended 12 May, the Labor Department said on Thursday, coming in ahead of consensus estimates that figures would jump to 215,000 in the latest week.

Claims for the week before were left unrevised.

Elsewhere, the Philadelphia Fed revealed that its manufacturing business outlook survey's current general activity index rose roughly 11 points to a reading of 34.4 in May, well above the economist consensus for a reading of 21.

That was put down to a boost from manufacturers in the mid-Atlantic region, where an uptick in hiring was reported for the month so far.

The survey's employment index rose to a seven-month high.

Readings for new orders soared in May, rising to 40.6 from 18.4 and the shipments index inched up to 25.8 from 23.9 in April.

In corporate news, Cisco Systems was down 3.76% after the company's quarterly services revenue missed expectations late on Wednesday.

Video game publisher Take-Two Interactive picked up 0.72% in early trade despite displeasing results in its quarterly results late on Wednesday, as revenue forecast fell short of analysts' expectations.

Walmart lost 1.9% following the release of its first-quarter results, even after it beat on adjusted earnings, and Children's Place plunged 7.95% after its own quarterly numbers.

Elsewhere, Williams Companies gained 2.3% after announcing that it would buy the remaining 26% stake that it does not already own in its master limited partnership, William Partners LP, for $10.5bn.

JCPenney tumbled 12.38% after posting disappointing guidance for the rest of the year.

Applied Materials and Nordstrom were down 4.56% and 6.99% in after-hours trading respectively, with both firms reporting after the closing bell.

The former, a chip component maker, projected revenue below current market estimates, while high-end department store chain Nordstrom saw same-store sales increase less than expected, even though its first quarter overall beat forecasts.


Friday newspaper round-up: Low paid workers, gender inequality, PayPal, Liberty Global

A smaller proportion of UK workers are low paid than at any time since the early 1980s, due to above-inflation increases in the government’s national living wage. A report by the Resolution Foundation thinktank said the share of employees who were officially classified as low paid – earning less than around £8.50 an hour – had fallen to 18%, the lowest since 1982. – Guardian

One of Britain’s biggest investment firms is taking on gender inequality by launching the first UK fund to prioritise investing in companies where women are well represented at all levels. Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM), which manages £983bn of assets, said the new fund - into which the firm has ploughed £50m of its own money - “aims to empower investors to make a difference to the companies in which they invest and wider society”. - Guardian

PayPal is swooping for Swedish payments start-up iZettle in a $2.2bn (£1.6bn) all-cash deal, as it seeks to create a "one-stop shop" for transactions. The deal will be PayPal's biggest purchase to date, gatecrashing plans by iZettle to float on the Nasdaq Stockholm in what would have been Europe's largest fintech IPO. - Telegraph

The international cable giant Liberty Global has launched a hunt for a new leader for its British operation Virgin Media, to work alongside chief executive Tom Mockridge as he prepares to step down. Mr Mockridge, who has run Virgin Media since Liberty Global took control in a £15bn takeover five years ago, is expected to vacate his £3m-a-year chief executive role in 2019. - Telegraph

Business is demanding reforms of the government’s apprenticeship levy after official figures showed that the number of new apprentices has collapsed by a quarter this year. Employer groups said that the decline was due to mismanagement rather than opposition to the scheme. Difficulties in accessing funding and the higher costs involved have become deterrents to recruiting apprentices, which is undermining the government’s ambition to add three million starts by 2020. - The Times

Ministers have called on the competition watchdog to investigate whether the £12 billion merger between Sainsbury’s and Asda is likely to harm supermarket suppliers and the food industry. Greg Clark, the business secretary, has written to Andrea Coscelli, the chief executive of the Competition and Markets Authority, to highlight the “potential concern” about the move among supermarket suppliers. - The Times

 

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