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Aug 6, 2018

Morning Euro Markets Bulletin

 
ADVFN  Morning Euro Markets Bulletin
Daily world financial news Monday, 06 August 2018 09:37:25
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London open: Stocks steady as investors mull HSBC numbers, IWG tumbles
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London stocks were steady in early trade on Monday as investors mulled over the latest results from banking giant HSBC.

At 0830 BST, the FTSE 100 was flat at 7,660.83, while the pound was down 0.1% against the dollar at 1.2988 and unchanged versus the euro at 1.1236 after international trade secretary Liam Fox said the probability of a no-deal Brexit was now at 60-40. Fox, in an interview with the Sunday Times, pinned the blame on the European Commission and Brussels' chief negotiator Michel Barnier.

Investors were also digesting the latest trade war rhetoric from US President Trump over the weekend, after he defended his use of tariffs at a rally in Ohio on Saturday and said he now has the upper hand over China.

On the corporate front, HSBC was in the red as it said pre-tax profits rose 5% to $10.7bn (£8.23bn), reflecting a net favourable movement in significant items and favourable currency translation. However, adjusted profit before tax of $12.1bn was 2% lower, as revenue growth and lower expected credit losses were partly offset by higher operating expenses.

The bank also announced the appointment of Jonathan Symonds, formerly chairman of HSBC Bank plc, as its deputy chairman.

IWG slumped after saying it has called off the months-long talks with three suitors, Starwood, Terra Firma and TDR, as the serviced office company's directors believe none of them "capable" of buying the business for a price they could recommend to shareholders. IWG also posted a 7.1% rise in in interim group revenue to £1.2bn, but a 31% drop in operating profit to £60.0m.

Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Markets.com, said: "If you consider that IWG has been in talks with multiple potential partners but failed to agree terms with any of them; either it’s reflective of management’s confidence in the future growth or they’re holding out for too high a price.

"They clearly have an eye on the kind of valuation that WeWork enjoys and think they should be achieving something similar. But this corporate Penelope may be playing it too cool."

Spire Healthcare tumbled after warning that 2018 earnings will be "materially" lower than the previous year amid weakness in the NHS business, while Vedanta Resources slipped even as the miner said first-quarter revenues rose 15% and earnings grew 26%.

Low-cost carrier EasyJet flew a touch lower as it said passenger numbers rose 4.5% year-on-year and the load factor improved 0.1 percentage points to 96.9%, but Wizz Air was in the green after posting a 23% jump in passenger numbers for July.

Ultra Electronics was on the front foot despite reporting a drop in first-half profit as it took a hit from cost overruns on certain development contracts.

Synthomer rallied as it said interim underlying pre-tax profit increased 6.4% and backed its full-year expectations and John Laing Infrastructure Fund advanced as it agreed to a takeover by a consortium of funds for £1.4bn.

In broker note action, Quilter was initiated at 'neutral' by JPMorgan and at 'buy' by Goldman Sachs.

Mitie was upgraded to 'buy' at Stifel, while William Hill was lifted to 'overweight' at Barclays and Morgan Advanced was upgraded to 'buy' at Berenberg.

TP ICAP was boosted to 'buy' by Peel Hunt, while Ferrexpo was lifted to 'outperform' at Credit Suisse and IG Group was downgraded to 'sell' at Shore Capital.

Elsewhere, Credit Suisse downgraded its stance on UK equities to 'benchmark' from 'overweight', noting that since its upgrade at the end of April, they have outperformed euro area stocks by around 3% and global stocks by around 1%. It cited a more cautious view on commodities and said a relatively soft Brexit is likely , which should support sterling. In addition, the bank said the UK equity market is now overbought, adding that it underperforms 70% of the time this happens.


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Market Status
 
 
change pct
+0.18%
 
cur price
7,714.98
 
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+14.13
 
 
change pct
-0.13%
 
cur price
20,850.74
 
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-27.51
 
 
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-0.23%
 
cur price
3,576.88
 
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-8.25

Top 10 FTSE 100 Risers

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# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1International Consolidated Airlines Group +2.22%+15.40708.80
2Admiral Group+1.97%+37.501,941.00
3Fresnillo plc+1.68%+16.701,013.50
4Direct Line+1.59%+5.30338.40
5Tesco+1.33%+3.40259.30
6Next Plc+1.09%+64.005,924.00
7Easyjet Plc+0.97%+15.501,613.50
8Royal Dutch Shell B+0.96%+25.502,672.50
9Royal Bank Of Scotland+0.95%+2.40255.90
10Royal Dutch Shell A+0.85%+22.002,620.00

Top 10 FTSE 100 Fallers

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# NameChange PctChangeCur Price
1Centrica-5.11%-7.80144.90
2Kingfisher Plc-3.14%-9.70299.50
3Standard Chartered-2.93%-20.40676.40
4Mediclinic International plc-2.30%-12.00510.20
5Smith & Nephew-2.21%-30.001,328.00
6Rentokil Initial-2.13%-7.30335.30
7Micro Focus International-1.48%-19.001,265.50
8Reckitt Benckiser-1.40%-96.006,774.00
9Relx Group-1.35%-22.501,649.00
10Experian-0.93%-17.501,868.00

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US close: Stocks finish week higher on the back of in-line jobs data

Stocks finished the week on the front foot and at their session highs, despite the release of a mixed batch of economic data, helped in part by Chinese authorities' decision to step-in to brake the fall in the country's currency.

By the end of trading, the Dow Jones Industrials had advanced 0.54% or 136.42 points to 25,462.58, alongside a rise of 13.13 points or 0.46% to 2,840.35 for the S&P 500 and of 9.33 points for the Nasdaq Composite to 7,812.01.

In parallel, the yield on the benchmark 10-year US Treasury note was lower by four basis points at 2.95%, with that on two-year Treasuries down by two points at 2.64%.

Pacing gains, by industrial groups were, Food Products (2.61%), Food Producers (2.61%), Distillers (2.45%) and Computer Services (2.04%).

The US dollar/yuan exchange rate meanwhile slipped 0.23% to 6.8270.

Stocks received an unexpected boost before the opening bell as Chinese authorities announced that they would adjust their forward foreign exchange risk reserve requirement ratio from 0% to 20%, in effect raising the cost of 'shorting' the country's currency, the yuan.

Nevertheless, soon afterwards Beijing threatened to retaliate against any new US tariffs with levies of its own ranging from between 5% and 25% on $60bn of American goods.

To take note of as well, according to some market observers weakness in the yuan year-to-date had already offset the impact of the first round of US tariffs.

Commenting on the market backdrop, Craig Erlam at Oanda said: "President Trump's unpredictability on trade is keeping capital markets on the back foot and a theme that is not expected to change anytime soon.

"[...] Worries over protectionism has this week punished global stocks despite a stronger earnings season, supported lower sovereign yields and pushed G10 currency pairs to new weekly lows outright. The Chinese yuan is on track to complete an eighth week decline - its longest losing streak in 25-years."

According to the Department of Labor, the US economy generated 157,000 new jobs last month; while that was less than 193,000 print which economists had been anticipating, it was more than offset by upwards revisions to data for prior months.

Growth in average hourly earnings meantime came in at 2.7% year-on-year, the same as in June and just as expected by the consensus.

"Better than it looks: the core trend is still 200K-plus. The swing in payroll growth from 248K in June to 157K in July looks more like noise than signal, but we can't be absolutely sure, given the clear dip in the ISM non-manufacturing employment index in recent months, following the initial of tariffs," said Ian Shepherdson at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

"Other employment indicators,like JOLTS and the NFIB survey, remain very strong, though, so for now we're happy to stick to the idea that the trend remains 200K-plus."

In parallel, the ISM said its services sector PMI fell from a reading of 59.1 for June to 55.7 in July (consensus: 58.6) - its weakest level since August 2017 - with multiple survey respondents indicating that trade tensions were already impacting on their sector.

The country's shortfall in its trade with the rest of the world meanwhile widened from -$43.2bn for May to -$46.3bn in June (consensus: $46.5bn) as exports declined by 2.2% month-on-month.

Shares of Kraft Heinz rocketed. Although the company saw profits drop during its second quarter as a result of cost headwinds, they nevertheless beat analysts' forecasts.

For the three months to June, the food manufacturer posted earnings per share of $0.62, which was down from $0.94 one year ago. Yet in adjusted terms, EPS printed at $1.0, easily surpassing the 92 cents expected by the consensus.

Biogen shares on the other hand dipped, despite the company unveiling a fresh $3.5bn share repurchase authorisation from its board.

Cisco was also in the headlines after it announced the purchase of authentication services provider Duo Security for $2.35bn.

Chesapeake Energy stock was trading on the front foot as well even after delivering a mixed set of results, with EPS for the latest quarter edging past market forecasts but revenues of $2.255bn shy of the $2.269bn that analysts had penciled-in.


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Monday newspaper round-up: Brexit, defence, FCFM, House of Fraser

Britain faces a Japanese-style future of permanently weak economic growth if immigration drops steeply in the years after Brexit, as forecasts indicate the working age population could start to shrink in just nine years’ time. As a result the economy would stagnate, investment would slow as businesses see their customer base fall, and Government finances would be put ­under immense strain as larger numbers of pensioners would have to be supported by fewer workers. - Telegraph

Downing Street has insisted that Theresa May is confident of securing a Brexit deal with Brussels despite Liam Fox’s assertion that the UK appears set to crash out of the EU without reaching an agreement. Whitehall sources said they believed there was only a very small chance of the government failing to secure a deal, but that preparations were being stepped up in what they described as the unlikely event of that taking place. - Guardian

Confidence among British business leaders has declined significantly and remains low, according to two reports that suggest the lack of progress over Brexit continues to cast a shadow over the UK economy. A poll of FTSE 350 businesses by ICSA: the Governance Institute found that 55% of UK company board members are predicting a decline in their business over the coming year, down from 24% six months ago. - Guardian

The services sector contracted for the first time in eight years last month amid growing fears about a possible no-deal exit from the European Union. The BDO Output Index recorded a drop of more than two points in services output in July, pushing the survey into negative territory for the first time since early 2010. - The Times

Brussels will break its own laws if it refuses to compromise on Brexit, ministers have warned their European counterparts. The EU “keeps stalling” and bringing the prospect of no deal ever closer, they say, even though the Lisbon Treaty requires it to do everything it can to find a workable arrangement with Britain. - Telegraph

Women will have to give up work to look after their ageing parents and grandparents unless EU care workers are given priority after Brexit, ministers have warned. The Department of Health said that in a "worst case scenario" if EU migrants are barred from coming to the UK there will be a shortfall of 6,000 doctors, 12,000 nurses and 28,000 care staff within five years. - Telegraph

The government is set to boost defence spending by about £800 million this year but has ruled out a new multi-year settlement, The Times understands. Gavin Williamson, the defence secretary, began a review of defence capabilities in January and is fighting behind the scenes for more cash for his department.

City tycoon Michael Spencer has quietly become chairman of investment firm FCFM after snapping up more than 90pc of the group’s shares. Sources told The Daily Telegraph that the former Conservative Party treasurer, who is selling his business Nex to US exchange giant CME for £3.9bn, has replaced ex-Numis boss Oliver Hemsley as chairman after buying a controlling stake in the Knightsbridge-based business for a valuation of £57m.

Rupert Murdoch must table a new £26bn-plus offer for Sky this week or see rival Comcast become the new owner of Europe’s biggest pay-TV broadcaster. Under UK takeover rules, Murdoch’s 21st Century Fox has until the end of Thursday to table a new bid to take control of the 61% of Sky he does not already own. - Guardian

Landlords have dropped a legal challenge against House of Fraser’s plan to possibly close more than half its stores, making it easier for the embattled department store to broker a rescue deal. The case, which was due to be heard in Edinburgh’s court of session next week, was settled over the weekend. The terms of the agreement are not being made public but are thought to include financial compensation. - Guardian

The government could be paying Amazon more for web services than the technology giant pays in tax, figures suggest. Public sector bodies spent £11.8 million of taxpayers’ money with Amazon Web Services in the first three months of this year, suggesting an annual spend of almost £50 million. - The Times

Scientists are calling for a temporary ban on oil drilling in Surrey after 12 earthquakes in four months. Four senior geologists say that there are risks to health and the environment from unstable geology that had not been identified when permission was granted for several oil exploration sites, including two a few miles from the earthquake epicentres. - The Times

Canadian craft beer makers are facing an aluminium drought amid Donald Trump’s trade war. Small brewers are struggling to source cans amid increased demand for the metal and supply chain disruption. In the wake of the tariffs being confirmed, large soft drink makers stocked up on the metal, leading to the current supply shortage, leaving small independent companies in trouble. - Telegraph

Applications to build an additional 35,000 homes on green belt land were submitted last year, taking the total number proposed for construction on protected land to a record 460,000. New data from the Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) released on Monday showed that more than 24,000 homes were constructed in the UK’s green belts in the past nine years. - Guardian

The Big Four auditors have been prioritising their profits ahead of making the best professional judgments, one of the City’s most influential investors has claimed. Standard Life Aberdeen, which controls £655 billion of assets, has held a series of meetings with the boards of companies in the FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 indices to try to convince them to consider appointing a player outside of the Big Four. - The Times

Investec is facing a fifth consecutive year of investor revolt after shareholders were urged to oust the chairman for her “troubling” response to City anger. Influential advisory group Glass Lewis told investors to rebel against Zarina Bassa’s re-election at Wednesday’s annual general meeting over a failure to quell dissent sparked by “excessive” boardroom pay. - Telegraph

The general manager of an offshore company connected with Beaufort Securities has pleaded guilty in the United States to a money-laundering conspiracy and a second defendant has been extradited from Hungary as the net appears to be tightening five months after the collapse of the City stockbroker. Arvinsingh “Vinesh” Canaye, a Mauritian citizen who ran Beaufort Management from the Indian Ocean island, was one of six individual defendants named in a US indictment issued in March hours after Beaufort Securities had been shut down by the City regulator over fears that it was insolvent. - The Times

Virgin has been awarded almost £2bn worth of NHS contracts over the past five years as Richard Branson’s company has quietly become one of the UK’s leading healthcare providers, Guardian analysis has found. In one year alone, the company’s health arm, Virgin Care, won deals potentially worth £1bn to provide services around England, making it the biggest winner among private companies bidding for NHS work over the period. - Guardian

The UK economy could benefit from more people of all ages attending university, a report has concluded. It also suggests the advance of automation, robotics, artificial intelligence and digital technology, as well as the challenges of Brexit and an ageing population are creating greater demand for those with qualifications above level 4. - Guardian

 

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