The latest Investing Matters Podcast episode featuring financial educator and author Jared Dillian has been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksHarbour Energy Share News (HBR)

Share Price Information for Harbour Energy (HBR)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 300.00
Bid: 299.60
Ask: 300.60
Change: -1.10 (-0.37%)
Spread: 1.00 (0.334%)
Open: 300.60
High: 310.50
Low: 299.50
Prev. Close: 301.10
HBR Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks mixed hours before expected US Fed hold

Wed, 31st Jan 2024 17:05

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed mixed on Wednesday in a trade-thinned day ahead of the US Federal Reserve interest rate decision this evening.

The FTSE 100 index closed down 35.74 points, 0.5%, at 7,630.57. The FTSE 250 ended up 8.45 points, marginally up, at 19,357.95 and the AIM All-Share closed down 0.14 of a point, marginally lower, at 754.75.

The Cboe UK 100 ended down 0.3% at 763.97, the Cboe UK 250 closed up 0.2% at 16,834.24, and the Cboe Small Companies ended up 0.2% at 14,772.04.

US monetary policymakers are expected to wrap-up their two-day meeting with a hold to interest rates later, which will be announced at 1900 GMT.

The key focus will be on the press conference and the outlook for interest rates.

According to the CME FedWatch Tool, there is a 46% chance the central bank lowers the federal funds rate range in March from the current 5.25% to 5.50%. A cut was once the most likely outcome for the March meeting, however.

"Today’s Fed decision is eagerly awaited by investors who are desperate to see what the Fed will hint at regarding the first rate cut," said IG analyst Chris Beauchamp.

"Much of the ebullient risk appetite we have seen over the past three months has been built on the expectation that the Fed will cut several times this year. Given how heavy the selling in Alphabet has been it looks like markets could get quite ugly if the Fed strikes a hawkish tone."

IG also said it will be a "busy 24 hours" for currency traders ahead of the Fed and Bank of England meetings. The BoE will announce its latest interest rate decision on Thursday at 1200 GMT.

"Market participants risk being caught between a rock and a hard place; the tight range seen in GBPUSD over the past two weeks screams indecision. Hopefully tonight and tomorrow will break the logjam," said IG's Beauchamp.

Alongside the BoE decision, there will also be the BoE's latest monetary policy report, with economic projections, as well as a press conference with Governor Andrew Bailey half an hour later.

Like the Fed, the BoE is expected to keep rates unchanged and the focus will be on messages about future policy decisions.

The pound was quoted at USD1.2715 at the equities close on Wednesday in London, higher compared to USD1.2665 on Tuesday. The euro stood at USD1.0846, higher against USD1.0839. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at JPY146.29, lower compared to JPY147.80.

Ahead of the Fed's decision this evening, numbers from payroll processor ADP showed that the US private sector added fewer jobs than expected at the start of the year.

Private sector employment increased by 107,000 jobs in January, easing from a downwardly revised 158,000 increase in December. Last month's figure was lowered from an initially reported 164,000 jobs.

January's job growth fell short of the FXStreet-cited market consensus of 145,000.

In addition, ADP said pay growth moderated in January. Annual wage growth for job stayers cooled to 5.2% this month from 5.4% in December. For job-changers, it slowed to 7.2% in January, the tamest growth since May 2021, from 8.0% in December.

The figures come two days before the official US nonfarm payrolls report for January. Numbers on Friday after expected to show employment growth eased to 180,000 this month from 216,000 in December, according to FXStreet-cited consensus.

Oanda dismissed the ADP survey compared to the upcoming official nonfarm payrolls report.

"The ADP employment number was lower than markets expected but I don't think it changes anything for a couple of reasons. The most obvious is that it's been a terrible indicator for the official payroll number so, barring an enormous miss, it should probably be ignored," said Oanda analyst Craig Erlam.

"The other is that employment is no longer as important to the Fed achieving its inflation goal, wages are the more important element of the jobs report."

Stocks in New York were largely downbeat at the London equities close, with the DJIA up 0.1%, but the S&P 500 index down 0.8% and the Nasdaq Composite down 1.4%.

In the FTSE 100, housebuilders were trading higher. Taylor Wimpey added 0.5%, Barratt Developments rose 1.2% and Persimmon climbed 0.4%.

The Nationwide house price index showed a 0.7% increase in seasonally-adjusted UK house prices in January, after showing no change in December. According to FXStreet, market consensus was for the house price index to edge up just 0.1% on-month.

Andrew Wishart, economist at Capital Economics, commented: "While the cost of the mortgage needed to buy the average home remains high by historical standards, the rise in house prices at the start of the year shows that declines in mortgage rates have been sufficient for house prices to eke out further gains."

Elsewhere in the FTSE 100, GSK gained 2.0%.

The Brentford, West London-based pharmaceutical maker said pretax profit climbed 7.7% to GBP6.06 billion in 2023 from GBP5.63 billion a year prior. Revenue rose 3.4% to GBP30.33 billion in 2023 from GBP29.32 billion.

GSK declared a final dividend of 16.00 pence per share, up from 13.75p in the fourth quarter of 2022. However, this brings the total dividend to 58.00p, down 5.3% from a total payout of 61.25p in 2022.

In the FTSE 250, Harbour Energy lost 5.4%. Goldman Sachs cut the oil and gas company's stock to 'sell' from 'buy'.

Amongst London's small caps, Smiths News rose 2.3%.

The newspaper and magazine distributor said trading in the year ending August 31 remains in line with market expectations.

Smiths said it has secured contract renewals across 74% of its current publisher revenue streams to at least 2029, underpinning revenue in the medium-term, alongside continuing to secure additional national and regional contract awards.

On AIM in London, ITM Power rose 24%.

The company which manufactures electolysers reported revenue for the six months ended October 31 surged to GBP8.9 million from GBP2.0 million a year earlier. Pretax loss narrowed to GBP18.2 million from GBP56.5 million.

Chief Executive Dennis Schulz said: "I am pleased to report that we have completed the implementation of our 12-month plan on time. The first half of the financial year already paints the early picture of a new ITM, which starts to be reflected in our improved financial results."

In European equities on Wednesday, the CAC 40 in Paris ended down 0.3%, while the DAX 40 in Frankfurt ended down 0.5%.

Germany's annual consumer inflation rate slowed by more than expected in January, numbers showed.

According to a Destatis estimate, the consumer price inflation rate abated to 2.9% in January from 3.7% in December. A less dramatic slowdown to 3.3% was expected, according to FXStreet-cited market consensus. It was the tamest rate of inflation since June 2021.

On a harmonised basis, allowing for EU-wide comparison, the rate of inflation cooled to 3.1% in January from 3.8% in December, and shy of the FXStreet cited consensus of 3.2%.

"The drop in German inflation will fuel speculations about an early [European Central Bank] rate cut, but underneath a favourable headline inflation there are still enough price pressures to worry about," said ING analyst Carsten Brzeski.

"We doubt that the ECB will be fooled by this drop in headline inflation. The monthly increase and still high underlying inflationary pressure clearly argue against too premature rate cuts."

Brent oil was quoted at USD81.03 a barrel on Wednesday, down from USD82.32 late Tuesday. Gold was quoted at USD2,050.57 an ounce, up against USD2,033.15.

In Thursday's UK corporate calendar, Shell posts its full-year results, while trading statements are released by BT and Glencore.

The economic calendar has a slew of manufacturing PMIs released, as well as consumer price inflation data for the eurozone.

By Greg Rosenvinge, Alliance News senior reporter

Comments and questions to newsroom@alliancenews.com

Copyright 2024 Alliance News Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

More News
31 Jul 2023 16:56

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 inches higher as BoE moves into focus

(Alliance News) - European equities closed slightly higher on Monday, supported by favourable eurozone data and the hope of more stimulus in China, after an underwhelming factory reading there.

Read more
31 Jul 2023 14:52

Britain commits to hundreds of North Sea oil and gas licences

UK commits to future North Sea licences

*

Read more
31 Jul 2023 09:41

Harbour Energy gets Track 2 status for Acorn, Viking projects

(Sharecast News) - Harbour Energy said on Monday that the Humber-based Viking CO2 transportation and storage network and Acorn CCS projects have been awarded Track 2 status as part of the government's CCS cluster sequencing process.

Read more
31 Jul 2023 09:03

IN BRIEF: Harbour Energy wins UK Track 2 status for Viking and Acorn

Harbour Energy PLC - oil and gas company with interests in Indonesia, Vietnam, Mexico and Norway - Says Viking CO2 transportation & storage network in Humber, north England and Acorn carbon capture & storage project in northeast Scotland are awarded Track 2 status by UK government. This allows both projects to progress to front end engineering & design plus discussions with the government over economic licence terms. Harbour says Viking could transport and store up to 10 million tonnes, and potentially enable CO2 shipping from UK and international emitters for permanent storage within the network's fields.

Read more
31 Jul 2023 08:05

UK says will issue 'hundreds' of new oil, gas licences in North Sea

(Alliance News) - The UK government said Monday it would issue "hundreds" of new oil and gas licences in the North Sea to secure energy reserves while still aiming for net zero carbon emissions by 2050.

Read more
25 Jul 2023 13:01

Indonesia's big gas projects to proceed after global majors sell stakes

TANGERANG, Indonesia, July 25 (Reuters) - Shell and Chevron's agreements to sell stakes in major Indonesian gas projects to Pertamina, Petronas and Eni will unleash development at the fields, enabling the country to boost its flagging output, the buyers said.

Read more
21 Jul 2023 09:33

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Jefferies raises Hargreaves Lansdown to 'buy'

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Friday morning:

Read more
21 Jul 2023 08:17

Berenberg trims price target on Harbour Energy

(Sharecast News) - Berenberg reiterated its 'hold' rating on Harbour Energy on Friday, but warned of potential downside to the current share price.

Read more
10 Jul 2023 09:27

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: HSBC downgrades commercial property stocks

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Monday morning and Friday:

Read more
5 Jul 2023 09:34

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: UBS likes Pearson; Liberum cuts Naked Wine

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Wednesday morning and Tuesday:

Read more
3 Jul 2023 17:05

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Blue chips lose early shine as US treads water

(Alliance News) - London's FTSE 100 ran out of steam on Monday to close little changed, while New York markets made a muted start to an abbreviated session ahead of Independence Day.

Read more
3 Jul 2023 12:05

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Miners and oil majors lead FTSE 100 march

(Alliance News) - European equities went into Monday afternoon on the up, with the FTSE 100 outperforming as it was supported by its natural resources sector and oil majors.

Read more
9 Jun 2023 14:39

Britain to waive oil, gas windfall tax if prices fall far enough

LONDON, June 9 (Reuters) - Britain's windfall tax on oil and gas producers will not be applied if prices drop below certain levels for six months in a row, the finance ministry said on Friday, in a move the government hopes will boost energy security.

Read more
9 Jun 2023 12:17

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Europe slips in pre-central bank jitters

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in Europe wobbled on Friday, with investors nervously awaiting next week's US inflation report and central bank decisions there and in the EU and Japan, while eyes turn to the New York open after a bullish run for the S&P 500 index continued on Thursday.

Read more
9 Jun 2023 07:46

Government introduces price floor on energy windfall tax

(Sharecast News) - A windfall tax on excessive oil and gas profits will be suspended should energy prices fall, the government confirmed on Friday.

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.