focusIR May 2024 Investor Webinar: Blue Whale, Kavango, Taseko Mines & CQS Natural Resources. Catch up with the webinar here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksECM.L Share News (ECM)

  • There is currently no data for ECM

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

LIVE MARKETS-Jobless claims, durables, et al: Slouching toward spring

Thu, 25th Feb 2021 16:05

* U.S. equity indexes fall, Nasdaq weakest

* Real estate, cons staples lead gainers; tech weakest

* Euro STOXX 600 down ~0.2%

* Dollar, gold down; crude flat

* U.S. 10-Year Treasury yield ~1.49%

Feb 25 - Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of
markets brought to you by Reuters reporters. You can share your
thoughts with us at markets.research@thomsonreuters.com

JOBLESS CLAIMS, DURABLES, ET AL: SLOUCHING TOWARD SPRING
(1105 EST/1605 GMT)

A spate of data unleashed on Thursday provided further
evidence of the U.S. economy's slow but steady recuperation from
the lingering effects of COVID-19.

The number of U.S. workers filing first-time applications
for unemployment insurance fell more than expected
last week to 730,000, according to the Labor Department.

While the number marks a decrease of 11,000 from the
previous week amid declining COVID-19 infections and ongoing
vaccine deployment, the effects of winter storms and freezing
weather that gripped the south in recent weeks is yet to be
determined.

Other factors, including fraud in Ohio and a chip shortage
resulting in fewer shifts at auto manufacturing plants, have
helped inflate claims data, which have remained stubbornly
higher than the 665,000 peak seen during the darkest days of the
global financial recession.

"The drop may be signaling a turning point for labor market
conditions, however the data continue to suffer from noise
related to issues of backlogs and fraud," writes Nancy Vanden
Houten, lead U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. "We expect a
more sustainable labor market recovery to take hold closer to
mid-year with broader vaccine distribution and the arrival of
more fiscal support."

Ongoing jobless claims, reported on a one-week lag, also saw
a larger decrease than analysts predicted, dipping to a
still-bruisingly-high 4.419 million, the lowest level since last
March.

New orders for U.S.-made durable goods, which
includes everything from toasters to jets, jumped by 3.4% in
January according to the Commerce Department, more than triple
the 1.1% consensus.

The increase was driven in large part by rebound of civilian
aircraft orders, which soared by 389.9%.

But new orders for core capital goods, which excludes
defense and aircraft and is seen as a barometer of U.S. business
spending plans, grew at a more languid 0.5% pace, below the 0.7%
economists forecast.

"The increase in core capital goods orders was the smallest
since the recovery began back in May, but it could easily be
revised up," says Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon
Macroeconomics. "The trend continues to rise strongly, and
business surveys suggest further solid gains over the next few
months are a decent bet."
Pending sales of pre-owned U.S. homes surprised
to the downside in January, unexpectedly dropping by 2.8%
according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR).

While the dip could be attributed to strained affordability
and record low inventories, pending home sales are still up 13%
year-on-year and remain well above pre-pandemic levels due to
swelling demand and low mortgage rates.

"There are simply not enough homes to match the demand on
the market," writes Lawrence Yun, chief economist at NAR. "That
said, there has been an increase in permits and requests to
build new homes."

In ancient history news, the U.S. Commerce Department
offered its second reading of fourth-quarter GDP,
which edged up 0.1% from its initial take to 4.1% on a quarterly
annualized basis.

Consumer spending, responsible for nearly 70% of U.S.
economic growth, was downwardly-revised to 2.4%, keeping the
headline number in check.

"Household spending slowed sharply in Q4 as expired benefits
weighed on activity," says Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist
at Pantheon Economics. "But prospects for spending and growth in
Q1 are brighter."

While stock futures enjoyed an initial bump from the largely
upbeat data, the buzz had worn off by late morning, with all
three major U.S. stock indexes in the red.

In an encore of previous two sessions, tech and
tech-adjacent shares helped drag the Nasdaq down the most.

(Stephen Culp)

*****

BAG THOSE VALUE CYCLICALS (1027 EST/1527 GMT)

Re-opening trade has made energy, banks
travel and leisure the best performing European sectors
this year, bringing Europe's STOXX 600 less than 5%
from its record highs, but a rise in bond yields has raised
fears of upending the market rally.

Goldman Sachs analysts retain a long recommendation in
value-cyclicals, as they consider these to be the most geared to
economic improvement, rising inflation risks and modestly higher
bond yields.

"Value offers cyclical upside and gearing to rising bond
yields," they say.

GS downgraded some cycicals that have performed strongly and
are starting to look expensive - industrials and
chemicals to underweight, and construction & materials
to neutral.

The U.S. bank moved up beverage, travel and leisure to their
favourite re-opening recommendations list, which includes
energy, aerospace, transport infrastructure and business
services.

It maintained neutral on technology and underweight
on consumer staples.

(Medha Singh)

*****

FTSE 100: WILL DR MARTENS GET ITS BOOTS ON THE GROUND? (0938
EST/1458 GM

Will Dr Martens put its famous black boots on the
ground of the FTSE 100 in March?

It's too close to call at this point but it's looks like a
possibility.

The iconic British shoe maker which made its stock market
debut at the end of January has seen its share price rocket from
370 pence to a high of 521 pence and is now hovering around the
500 line.

Its market cap has been moving up and down the 5 billion
pound mark, which is well higher than the laggards of the FTSE
100, utility group Pennon and WM Morrison Supermarkets
.

Relegation seems certain for the former with a market cap
well below 4 billion.

On Tuesday, index provider FTSE Russell said its indicative
review had Pennon replaced by mining group Weir,
currently at the top of the FTSE 250.

In the same statement, FTSE Russell said Dr Martens made it
to the FTSE 250 but not to the Premier League.

Standing in its way is Morrison, currently struggling to
stay above the 111th position which would boot it out of the
FTSE 100.

"It's on the fringes", commented AJ Bell investment director
Russ Mould, who stressed that with still three sessions to go,
it would be premature to make a call on the outcome.

The review of the FTSE indexes will be based on Tuesday's
market close and the results announced on Wednesday evening.

Anyhow, if Morrison is to be kicked out of the FTSE 100, who
is better equipped than Dr Martens to oblige?

Well to cite other big names, travel group TUI
and Electrocomponents are also in kissing range of a 5
billion market cap.

Here you can see how the market caps of outsiders Weir and
Dr Martens outplay current FTSE 100 members WM Morrison and
Pennon.

(Julien Ponthus)

*****

NASDAQ FUTURES: SHAKEN, AND STILL STIRRED (0858 EST/1358
GMT)

After recovering to close just modestly lower on Tuesday,
CME e-mini Nasdaq 100 futures have so far mounted a
2-day bounce. That said, the rally does not appear
sufficient on the charts to suggest recent damage has been
repaired:

Indeed, futures hit an overnight high of 13,353.75 early
Thursday. However, upside is hindered by a broken channel
resistance line from October, as well as what was a shorter-term
channel support line from November, now acting as resistance, in
the 13,400/13,440 area.

So far, the futures are backing away, and near the day's
lows.

That said, in terms of the developing structure down from
the February peak, the key level appears to be 13,468. This can
be considered to be the low of the first wave down of a
developing 5-wave decline on an Elliott Wave basis.

A failure to overwhelm this barrier can suggest that bear
forces are still in control, which will ultimately lead to a
fresh lows below Tuesday's 12,757.25 trough.

A recovery above 13,468, however, can suggest that the
5-day, more than 8%, slide into Tuesday's low, amid rising bond
yields, was corrective in nature (or a 3-wave a-b-c
decline). In that event, the futures would then be biased for
new highs.

(Terence Gabriel)

*****

FOR THURSDAY'S LIVE MARKETS' POSTS PRIOR TO 0900 EST/1400
GMT - CLICK HERE:

(Terence Gabriel is a Reuters market analyst. The views
expressed are his own)

More News
12 Oct 2016 17:35

Broker tips: Sports Direct, Ashmore, Electrocomponents

(ShareCast News) - Sports Direct International was under the cosh on Wednesday as Cantor Fitzgerald cut its price target on the hold-rated stock to 260p from 320p after the company warned last week that full-year 2017 earnings would be hit by recent currency movements. "The news is obviously disappo

Read more
12 Oct 2016 14:40

Wednesday broker round-up

(ShareCast News) - Shire: Goldman Sachs keeps at buy with a target price of 6300p. Page Group: HSBC reiterates hold, 385p target. McCarthy & Stone: UBS keeps at sell with a 150p target. Arrow Global: Macquarie reiterates outperform with a 335p target. Electrocomponents: Citigroup keeps at neutral

Read more
12 Oct 2016 12:30

Electrocomponents boosted by Citi upgrade

(ShareCast News) - Electrocomponents got a boost after Citigroup upgraded the stock to 'neutral' from 'sell' and lifted the price target to 375p from 235p. The bank said the change in recommendation reflects earnings per share upgrades and recognises gross margin stabilisation, increased own brand p

Read more
4 Oct 2016 16:04

FTSE 250 movers: Exporters exce but OneSavings tops the list

(ShareCast News) - Boosted by another plunge in the pound that is expected to prop up exporters, the FTSE 250 was 1.66% higher late on Tuesday. Exporting companies that were high in the leaderboard included European-focused lender International Personal Finance, equipment rental group Aggreko, which

Read more
20 Sep 2016 15:46

Tuesday broker round-up

(ShareCast News) - Petra Diamonds: Citigroup reiterates buy with a target price of 120p; JP Morgan reiterates overweight with a 139p target. Bovis Homes: UBS upgrades to neutral, 910p target. Electrocomponents: Credit Suisse keeps at underperform with a 300p target. Easyjet: HSBC keeps at reduce w

Read more
15 Sep 2016 08:14

BUZZ-Electrocomponents: Hits 12-yr high on H1 profit forecast

** Electrocomponents shares up 13 pct, second-largest FTSE midcap gainers, after saying it expects H1 pretax profit of about 54 mln stg, 73 pct higher ** Co says underlying sales grew 2 pct in H1; Numis analysts say this implies sales growth of 3 pct in Q2 vs 1 pct in Q1 ** Numis ups

Read more
15 Sep 2016 07:33

Electrocomponents expects solid increase in H1 profit

(ShareCast News) - FTSE 250 electronics distributor Electrocomponents said on Thursday that it expects to post a significant increase in first-half pre-tax profit following stronger-than-anticipated trading. In a trading update ahead of its half-year results in November, the company said it now expe

Read more
15 Sep 2016 06:45

Electrocomponents Expects Jump In Interim Profit On Better Trading

Read more
20 Jul 2016 17:01

FTSE 250 movers: Precious metals miners knocked lower

(ShareCast News) - Electrocomponents paced gains on the second-tier index after the electrical components distributor said its first quarter sales to 30 June grew only 1%, but that was a slowdown from the 3.5% rise recorded in the first six weeks of the period. It was also down from the 2% growth in

Read more
20 Jul 2016 08:50

Electrocomponents improves margins though sales slow in first quarter

(ShareCast News) - Electrocomponents got off to a strong start to its financial year, with gross margins improving as cost-cutting proves more effective than expected. Sales in the electrical components distributor's first quarter to 30 June grew only 1%, but this was a slowdown from the 3.5% rise i

Read more
20 Jul 2016 06:55

Electrocomponents Gross Margin Improves In Solid First Quarter

Read more
6 Jul 2016 07:54

BUZZ-Electrocomponents: shares hit by HSBC downgrade

** Electrical parts maker Electrocomponents shares -3.6 pct, on track for biggest one-day fall since April, after HSBC cuts rating to "hold" from "buy", TP to 240p v 290p ** Broker flags strong USD lifts sales but squeezes gross margins ** Says management action will help gross margin

Read more
27 Jun 2016 11:23

DIRECTOR DEALINGS: Electrocomponents CEO Buys First Shares

Read more
15 Jun 2016 13:50

Wednesday newspaper share tips: Premier Farnell and FirstGroup

(ShareCast News) - Premier Farnell shareholders should accept a decent price for a fading business, opines the Financial Times' Lex column after yesterday's recommended bid by Daetwyler. The Leeds-based outfit made most of its money by distributing electronic components and rivalry in the market has

Read more
26 May 2016 15:53

Thursday broker round-up

(ShareCast News) - Great Portland States: Jefferies downgrades to underperform with a 650p target. Electrocomponents: RBC upgrates to sector perform with a 270p target. Marks & Spencer: Jefferies downgrades to underperform with a target price of 300p, Exane BNP Paribas downgrades to underperform wi

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.