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May 25, 2018

Morning Euro Markets Bulletin

 
ADVFN  Morning Euro Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news Friday, 25 May 2018 11:00:03
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London open: Stocks push higher ahead of GDP data
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London stocks were coaxed higher in early trade on Friday following North Korea’s conciliatory response to US President Trump’s decision to cancel their summit, with all eyes on the latest UK GDP reading.

At 0830 BST, the FTSE 100 was up 0.4% to 7,750.57, while the pound was down 0.3% against the dollar at 1.3346 and 0.1% lower versus the euro at 1.1411.

On Thursday, Trump announced that he had cancelled his meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore next month, blaming "open hostility". However, North Korea’s measured response seems to have assuaged investors following a wobble in the previous session, as an official for the country said it is still willing to meet with the US to "resolve issues any time and in any format".

On the data front, the second estimate of first-quarter UK gross domestic product is due at 0930 BST, alongside mortgage approvals from UK Finance.

"We're looking for the second print of Q1 GDP to remain unchanged at 0.1% q/q, but will be taking a closer look at the first details of the national accounts breakdown," said TD Securities.

In corporate news, Pennon racked up strong gains as it reported a rise in full-year pre-tax profit and hiked its dividend as it sounded a positive note on the outlook for water and waste.

AstraZeneca was on the front foot after saying that phase III trials of its Imfinzi lung cancer treatment showed positive overall survival results in lung cancer patients whose disease had not progressed following chemotherapy and radiation.

Spectris was also trading higher as it posted a jump in group like-for-like sales for the first quarter and said its performance remains consistent with its expectations for the full year.

GVC Holdings rallied after saying it now expects cost synergies from its acquisition of Ladbrokes Coral to be £130m by 2021 versus the £100m expected at the time of the deal.

On the downside, SSE fell despite lifting its full-year dividend by 3.7% to 94.7p as it posted a 6% drop in full-year pretax profit and cut its medium-term dividend outlook.

Gold miner Centamin tumbled as it cut its production guidance for 2018 but said earnings were up 71% in the first quarter.

In broker note action, Royal Mail was knocked lower by a downgrade to 'sell’ by Berenberg, while Moneysupermarket was hit by a downgrade to 'add’ at Peel Hunt.

Big Yellow Group was cut to 'neutral' at JPMorgan and Imperial Brands was cut to 'sector perform’ by RBC Capital Markets.


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Market Status
 
 
change pct
+0.32%
 
cur price
7,741.73
 
change
+24.99
 
 
change pct
+0.61%
 
cur price
21,116.70
 
change
+127.21
 
 
change pct
+0.58%
 
cur price
3,550.81
 
change
+20.54

Top 10 FTSE 100 Risers

# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1Kingfisher Plc+3.84%+11.40308.30
2Severn Trent+3.15%+64.002,097.00
3United Utilities+3.12%+24.80819.00
4Smurfit Kappa Group+2.47%+74.003,074.00
5Mediclinic International plc+2.31%+14.20629.80
6BT Group+2.07%+4.20207.35
7Burberry Group+2.03%+40.002,010.00
8Paddy Power Betfair+1.92%+170.009,025.00
9G4S+1.79%+4.90278.40
10Hargreaves Lansdown+1.59%+31.001,979.50

Top 10 FTSE 100 Fallers

# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1Johnson Matthey-1.21%-42.003,428.00
2Royal Dutch Shell B-0.77%-20.502,656.50
3Standard Chartered-0.73%-5.50748.70
4Royal Dutch Shell A-0.52%-13.502,584.50
5Randgold Resources-0.52%-30.005,766.00
6Merlin Entertainments Plc-0.37%-1.40374.50
7British Petroleum-0.35%-2.00564.50
8Vodafone Group-0.34%-0.66194.20
9Glencore-0.19%-0.70375.90
10BAE Systems-0.15%-1.00644.60

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US close: Street falls as sentiment hit by North Korea news

Wall Street moved finished in the red on Thursday amid growing geopolitical concerns, with worries about trade talks with China and Trump's decision to pull out of a historic summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un weighing on investors' minds.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ended the session down 0.3% at 24,811.76, the S&P 500 was off 0.2% at 2,726.76, and the Nasdaq 100 slipped 0.06% to 6,949.70.

Trump told North Korean leader Kim Jong Un that a planned summit between the two "will not take place" in a letter that followed expressions of anger from officials of the rogue nation over US demands to denuclearise.

In his letter, Trump said, "you talk about your nuclear capabilities, but ours are so massive and powerful that I pray to God they will never have to be used."

Choe Son Hui, North Korea's vice minister of foreign affairs, said that if the 12 June talks were cancelled, the US would be faced with a "nuclear-to-nuclear showdown".

Elsewhere, Trump reignited concerns about a trade war between the US and China by announcing plans for an investigation that could lead to import tariffs on cars.

The US Department of Commerce said late on Wednesday that it had begun a probe into auto imports to determine whether they "threaten to impair the national security" of the US.

"There is evidence suggesting that, for decades, imports from abroad have eroded our domestic auto industry," Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a statement, as he promised a "thorough, fair and transparent investigation".

China hit back by saying that the probe was an "abuse" of national security clauses.

On the data front, the number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits rose last week to a seven-week high, according to data from the Labor Department.

US initial jobless claims were up 11,000 to 234,000 from the previous week's level, which was revised up by 1,000. Economists had been expecting a reading of 220,000.

Meanwhile, the four-week moving average was up 6,250 to 219,750 from the previous week's average, which was revised up by 250.

In other news, sales of US existing homes slid in April after two straight months of increases, according to data from the National Association of Realtors.

Sales fell by 2.5% to a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 5.46m in April. Economists had been expecting a level of 5.57m.

On the year, sales were 1.4% lower and have fallen year-over-year for two straight months.

In corporate news, Victoria's Secret parent L Brands collected 3.44% despite downgrading its outlook late on Wednesday.

Shares in Hormel Foods lost 1.12% after earnings slipped on less than expected revenue rise, while Medtronic ticked up 1.98% following a fourth-quarter earnings and revenues beat.

Best Buy slumped 6.65% as online growth slowed for the electronics retailer, and McKesson dropped 1.87% after missing estimates.


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Friday newspaper round-up: Bunnings, Lloyds, Apple, Bitcoin investigation

The Australian hardware chain Bunnings has pulled the plug on its disastrous $1bn venture into Britain, drawing an ignominious close to one of the worst retail acquisitions ever seen. After burning through hundreds of millions of dollars trying to sell the all-conquering sandpaper-meets-sausage-sizzle formula to DIY-crazy Britons, Bunnings’ parent group, Wesfarmers, said on Friday that it was offloading the 200-plus chain of former Homebase stores for a reported £1 nominal fee. – Guardian

Lloyds Banking Group has suffered its first significant shareholder rebellion since fully exiting state ownership last year, after more than a fifth of investors refused to back its remuneration report. Almost 21% of Lloyds investors voted against the bank’s executive pay report for 2017, which was seen as a landmark year for the company after it ended almost a decade of taxpayer ownership. - Guardian

Apple has been awarded $539m (£400m) in damages from Samsung, in the latest round of a bitter patent battle that began seven years. The amount is almost half that which Silicon Valley smartphone giant Apple had been seeking from Samsung for its infringement of five patents with phones it sold back in 2010 and 2011, but significantly more than the $28m Samsung was arguing it should have to pay. - Telegraph

The Government has piled more pressure on Heathrow to keep a lid on its expansion costs after broadening powers which enable the aviation regulator to more closely scrutinise the airport’s plans. Transport Secretary Chris Grayling said the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) would now be able to seek views on the expansion of Heathrow from a wider pool and would also be able to benchmark the price of the project against international comparisons. - Telegraph

Bitcoin traders in Britain are being investigated by American justice officials as part of an inquiry into criminal price manipulation in digital currency markets. The US Department of Justice is examining trading in Britain, America and other countries amid concern that individuals or groups are illegally moving digital currency prices to the detriment of other investors, sources said. - The Times

The value of Shop Direct’s bonds plunged yesterday after the debt market took a dim view of a £25 million “dividend payment” to the online retailer’s billionaire owners, the Barclay brothers. In events that one debt trader described as “a spectacle that ranged from inept to scandalous”, the retailer behind Very.co.uk and Littlewoods spooked the bond market after it could not properly explain why £25 million had been paid to a holding company controlled by Sir Frederick and Sir David Barclay. - The Times

 

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