Search This Blog

May 8, 2018

Morning Euro Markets Bulletin

 
ADVFN  Morning Euro Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news Tuesday, 08 May 2018 10:30:43
Monitor Quote Charts News CFD's Compare Brokers Free BB
 
CryptoCompare MJAC Blockchain Summit - Old Billingsgate - London - 13th June

Come meet with the cryptocurrency elite and discover exciting businesses at the cutting edge of this new financial industry.


Click Here for the Event Website


Click Here for the MJAC PlusOneCoin Faucet and claim your free cryptocurrency


London open: Stocks edge higher amid whirl of deal news
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

London stocks edged higher on Tuesday as sunburnt traders returned to their desks from the baking Bank Holiday weekend to find a flurry of deal news, with the latest Chinese trade data in focus as investors eyed an announcement by US President Trump over the Iran nuclear deal.

At 0820 BST, the FTSE 100 was up 0.2% to 7,584.93, while the pound was up 0.1% against the dollar and the euro to 1.3568 and 1.1381, respectively.

London Capital Group analyst Jasper Lawler said: "Repeated criticism from Tump over the US Iranian nuclear disarmament deal has traders fearing that a withdrawal from Trump could see US sanctions being re-imposed on Iran. These sanctions would almost certainly include reductions to the country’s oil exports, jolting the oil market and lifting the price of oil in recent sessions."

Trump tweeted on Monday: "I will be announcing my decision on the Iran deal tomorrow from the White House."

Lawler said the tweet was rather unexpected, given that the US-Iran nuclear pact deadline runs until Saturday 12th May.

"Usually an earlier than expected announcement from negotiations could be considered a positive sign, but the markets are not so sure this time round, which may be wise given Trump’s unpredictability. That said, the selloff in oil could just be a sign of a spooked market that was caught off guard, longer than it intends to be with such a big risk event suddenly upon it."

Data out of China earlier showed the country's exports bounced back in April more strongly than expected. Exports were up 12.9% from a year earlier, beating expectations for a 6.3% jump and rebounding from a 2.7% fall in March.

Still to come on the UK data front, Halifax house prices for April are due at 0830 BST.

In UK corporate news, deal news helped to inject some life into proceedings, with Virgin Money racking up healthy gains after Clydesdale and Yorkshire Bank owner CYBG made an all-share takeover approach that values its FTSE 250 rival at £1.6bn. CYBG picked up slightly and fellow challenger banks Metro Bank and OneSavings both rallied.

Shire gained as its board agreed a takeover offer from Japan's Takeda Pharmaceutical in a mix of cash and shares that values the FTSE 100 biotech at roughly £46bn. Three Shire directors will join Takeda's board as part of the deal.

Buy-to-let property lender Paragon Banking Group edged higher after it confirmed that it is considering a possible acquisition of residential development finance lender Titlestone, while US cable network Comcast made various assurances around its bid for satellite broadcaster Sky.

Referring to an earlier proposed deal, the Competition & Markets Authority said it has referred the proposed merger of SSE's retail business and Npower for an in-depth investigation after finding competition concerns.

AstraZeneca pushed up after saying it had sold the rights to its antipsychotic treatment Seroquel to Luye Pharma for $538m, while bookmaker William Hill rose after it said net revenue for the first 17 weeks of the year was up 3% thanks to strong online and US performances.

Chilean copper miner Antofagasta was higher after saying it had detected and cleared a blockage at its Los Pelambres pipeline, where operation was immediately suspended, but that full-year production remained unchanged.

Oil giant Royal Dutch Shell was little changed after agreeing to sell its entire in Canadian Natural Resources for $3.3bn.

Standard Life Aberdeen nudged down as it said Lloyds Banking Group did not have the right to withdraw £109bn of funds. The fund manager said Lloyds was wrong to state in February that the merger between Standard Life and Aberdeen Asset Management made the combined company a competitor.

Insurer Hiscox ticked a touch lower as it said gross written premiums grew by 20.3% in the first three months of the year but warned that growth in big-ticket business for the rest of the year will be more measured..

In broker note action, Just Group was initiated at 'hold' by Deutsche Bank.


Daily cryptocurrency Tracker 8.5.18: EOS climbs 7%

Crypto markets were overall positive over the past 24 hours, with 8 of the top 10 cryptos registering gains. Bitcoin and Ethereum were nearly flat at the time of writing, with the...

Read More..


Market Status
 
 
change pct
+0.15%
 
cur price
7,578.28
 
change
+11.14
 
 
change pct
+0.68%
 
cur price
20,560.23
 
change
+138.35
 
 
change pct
+0.80%
 
cur price
3,466.70
 
change
+27.49

Top 10 FTSE 100 Risers

# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1Shire Plc+4.01%+154.504,010.50
2Kingfisher Plc+3.02%+8.50289.70
3Unilever Plc+2.75%+109.504,090.50
4Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust+2.14%+10.40497.40
5Ashtead Group+1.92%+40.002,127.00
6Croda International+1.75%+78.004,546.00
7Babcock International Group+1.74%+12.80748.00
8Intercontinental Hotels Group+1.63%+76.004,743.00
9Associated British Foods+1.63%+44.002,750.00
10Old Mutual+1.55%+3.90255.10

Top 10 FTSE 100 Fallers

# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1Standard Chartered-1.50%-11.20736.80
2Sky plc-1.35%-18.501,354.00
3Anglo American-1.11%-19.401,732.00
4Rio Tinto-0.97%-39.504,035.50
5Barclays-0.83%-1.70203.90
6Glencore-0.81%-2.90357.10
7British Petroleum-0.77%-4.30553.80
8HSBC Holdings-0.74%-5.30709.10
9Sainsbury-0.73%-2.20299.10
10BHP Billiton-0.71%-11.401,590.00

Atlantic Advisory - Share Tips of the Year 2018

Download Our Latest Report Here

Losses can exceed deposits


Crypto Currencies
#1 Bitcoin (BTC)
change
+0.55%
mktcap
159.75B
volume
51464.87T
price
9,400.00
#2 Ethereum (ETH)
change
+1.51%
mktcap
75.61B
volume
20138.69T
price
760.06
#3 Ripple (XRP)
change
+2.10%
mktcap
32.75B
volume
15266.92T
price
0.83
#4 Bitcoin Cash / BCC (BCH)
change
+1.45%
mktcap
28.39B
volume
9806.75T
price
1,648.79
#5 EOS (EOS)
change
+9.23%
mktcap
15.64B
volume
14056.31T
price
18.62

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


US open: Small gains on the Street following non-farm payrolls miss

Wall Street trading opened with small gains on Friday as investors ran over the latest non-farm payrolls report.

At 1510 BST, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 were up 0.12% and 0.08%, respectively, while the Nasdaq was up 0.31%.

The main focus of the day has been the payrolls report, which revealed weaker than expected job growth throughout April, despite the unemployment rate falling to its lowest level in more than seventeen years.

The Labour Department said non-farm payroll employment increased by 164,000 in the month after it rose by an upwardly revised 135,000 jobs in March.

Economists had predicted that employment would increase by 192,000 following an initially estimated gain of 103,000 jobs during the previous month.

James Ingram, investment manager at MB Capital, said the results were "another miss", but noted that with the upward revision to March's "anaemic figure", the impact on the US economy had "effectively netted itself out".

"But of far greater concern is the underlying cause for the slowing rate in job creation – the US labour market is now stretched tight as a drum," Ingram said. "With the unemployment rate at its lowest level since the millennium and the participation rate sliding, policymakers face an awkward conundrum — where are future jobs and growth going to come from?"

Investors were also be keeping an eye on trade talks between the US and China.

Lukman Otunuga, research analyst at FXTM, said: "The chances of a breakthrough trade deal from the two-day meeting are seen as highly unlikely. However, the talks could be a positive step for the two nations to avoid a potential trade war. Although it is difficult to predict the outcome of the trade meetings, continual talks and negotiations between the Trump administration officials and Chinese officials may ease tensions."

On the corporate front, Newell Brands was 4.76% higher following the release of its first-quarter earnings, while Cardinal Health picked up 3.84% after its share plunged late on Thursday as the drug distributor cut its annual earnings forecast and posted a lower-than-expected quarterly profit.

Tech giant Apple was up 2.83% after CNBC said Berkshire Hathaway bought 75m shares in the company in the first quarter, while Go-Pro moved ahead 6.85% and Shake Shack soared 21.51% after both posted solid earnings late on Thursday.


Tuesday newspaper round-up: Brexit, retail, rail, manufacturers

Theresa May is facing renewed cross-party pressure to accept membership of the European Economic Area (EEA) or risk defeat in the Commons. Peers vote on Tuesday night on a series of amendments as officials work to try to find a deal on May’s preferred option of a customs relationship with Europe that is acceptable to Brexiters and remainers in her cabinet, as well as MPs and EU negotiators. - Guardian

…the Prime Minister has put off another confrontation over her favoured “customs partnership” with the EU this week as she tries to erode cabinet opposition. The prime minister had been expected to try to force through a revised version of the plan at meeting of her inner cabinet on Thursday but the critical issue of how Britain manages its trade borders with the EU will not be discussed until a week on Wednesday. - The Times

The UK’s households are borrowing more money than they are saving for the first time since the so-called “Lawson boom” in the Eighties, the credit rating agency Fitch has warned. British families are, on average, savers, putting money aside, usually in a bank account, which lenders then loan out to fund business investment. - Telegraph

Retailers are in their worst shape for nearly five years and the industry’s woes look set to deepen in the face of weak demand and soaring costs. The health of the retail industry dropped by one point to 79 during the first quarter, hitting its lowest level since 2013, according to a KPMG/Ipsos Retail Think Tank report. - Telegraph

Britain’s manufacturers have called on the government to make faster progress on its industrial strategy to help address a slump in productivity in key sectors. The EEF said an independent industrial strategy council - promised by the business secretary, Greg Clark, in last autumn’s white paper - should be created immediately and given the “urgent task” of setting clear goals for boosting Britain’s manufacturing performance. - Guardian

Sir Michael Fallon is calling on the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy to set a target of all offshore wind turbines containing at least 60pc British content, a rise of 10 percentage points on current levels. The former energy minister believes that the growing importance of green energy should be reflected in the UK’s industrial strategy. - Telegraph

The rail industry is preparing for a cull in the number of fares and season tickets offered to commuters as it launches an appeal for root-and-branch reform of the “outdated” regulations underpinning the £9.7bn-a-year fares system. Britain’s rail companies are beginning a public consultation into the rules underpinning the country’s ticketing options, which have ballooned in complexity to offer passengers about 55m different fares. - Guardian

Confidence in the eurozone ­economy has tumbled to a fresh 15-month low as investors begin to fret about a sharp slowdown in growth and the ­recent spike in trade tensions with the United States. Economists had expected investor confidence in the eurozone to make a modest rebound in May but it dropped for a fourth consecutive month to a reading of 19.2. - Telegraph

Every person in Britain should receive £10,000 when they turn 25 to help fix the “broken” intergenerational contract between millennials and baby boomers, an influential thinktank has proposed following a two-year study. The payment, described as a “citizen’s inheritance”, is intended to redistribute wealth at a time when young people need it most to find housing, return to education or start a business. - Guardian

Defence officials warned the government that backing a European ban on palm oil could jeopardise a deal to sell British-built fighter jets to Malaysia, documents have revealed. The ban is intended to protect the habitats of orangutans and other endangered species. - The Times

Private hospitals have been given two weeks to come up with a plan to “get their house in order” on safety and quality or else face tough sanctions imposed by the government, the Guardian has learned. On Tuesday, Jeremy Hunt will write to the chief executives of 206 private hospitals across England following a damning report into the sector by the safety regulator last month.

The rising popularity of self-employment risks undermining the sustainability of Britain’s state pension as national insurance contributions fall, new research has found. For every one million people moving from being employed to being self-employed, £2.8bn is lost annually from national insurance contributions, which fund the state pension, according to a report from pensions firm Aegon. - Telegraph

US government researchers have uncovered evidence that some popular weedkilling products, like Monsanto’s widely-used Roundup, are potentially more toxic to human cells than their active ingredient is by itself. These “formulated” weedkillers are commonly used in agriculture, leaving residues in food and water, as well as public spaces such as golf courses, parks and children’s playgrounds. - Guardian

Virgin Money is mulling a proposed takeover bid from the owner of Clydesdale Bank and Yorkshire Bank which would value the challenger bank at £1.6bn. The Newcastle upon Tyne-based lender, backed by billionaire Richard Branson, said CYBG has suggested handing investors 1.13 of its shares for each Virgin Money share they own to give them a 36.5pc of the combined group. - Telegraph

 

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