The next focusIR Investor Webinar takes places on 14th May with guest speakers from WS Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksLegal & General Share News (LGEN)

Share Price Information for Legal & General (LGEN)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 248.60
Bid: 248.40
Ask: 248.60
Change: -0.30 (-0.12%)
Spread: 0.20 (0.081%)
Open: 249.80
High: 249.90
Low: 247.60
Prev. Close: 248.90
LGEN Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Bulkamania: dividend upgrades coming

Wed, 16th Nov 2022 11:11

STOXX 600 down 0.6%

*

Polish incident lifts defence stocks

*

Autos, real estate top sectoral fallers

*

British inflation hits 41-year high

*

U.S. stock futures flat to higher

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

BULKAMANIA: DIVIDEND UPGRADES COMING (1110 GMT)

RBC Capital Markets sounds bullish on UK life insurers and that optimism boils down to what it calls "bulkamania".

The Canadian-based bank bets on an "unprecedented" demand for bulk annuities stemming from this year's dramatic jump in long yields and sees fatter dividend payouts for investors.

"Our analysis reveals a stepup in demand for bulk annuities which should significantly exceed supply, underpinning our expectation for an increase in volumes, written at better margins and improved capital strain," say RBC analysts.

"The long-term capital generated by higher new business should support additional dividend capacity of 35% of the sector's market cap and drives our updated expectation for higher than consensus dividend growth rates," they add.

At an average 2023 dividend yield of 8.4%, RBC sees a buying opportunity here and notes how the sector has lagged the market by 25% since COVID-19.

It is overweight on Just Group, L&G, Aviva and Phoenix.

AN UNENVIABLE JOB FOR THE BOE (1042 GMT)

Today's British inflation numbers are set to give the Bank of England more sleepless nights. Consumer prices rose 11.1% in October, the most since October 1981 and well above the central bank's 2% target.

BoE governor Andrew Bailey and other policymakers will no doubt be in for a bumpy ride when they testify in front of lawmakers later.

And it could have been even worse. The Office for National Statistics said inflation would have been even higher had it not been for government intervention to limit the price of household energy bills.

"With significantly higher mortgage rates and energy and food bills, plus universal tax hikes to be announced tomorrow, setting monetary policy has never looked more challenging," says James de Bunsen, multi-asset fund manager at Janus Henderson Investors.

The market reaction has been relatively subdued which according to de Bunsen suggests that the data won't precipitate a more hawkish stance from the BoE. Markets are currently fully pricing in a 50 basis point rate hike next month with around a 40% chance of a second straight 75 bp hike.

For the pound, higher inflation is a "double edged sword", according to Matthew Ryan, head of market strategy at Ebury.

"On one hand, it increases the chances of aggressive rate hikes from the BoE, though on the other, it suggests that a deeper and more prolonged downturn in the UK economy may be on the horizon," Ryan says.

Eyes are now set to turn to Bailey's testimony at 1415 GMT and tomorrow's Autumn Statement from finance minister Hunt where tax rises and spending cuts are likely to be announced.

According to de Bunsen, Hunt "will seek to reassure markets that a grown-up is in charge again, but will also undoubtedly serve to all but extinguish any last flickers of consumer exuberance."

Tough times ahead for British households.

STOXX DOWN DESPITE DEFENCE, OIL BOOST (0926 GMT)

European shares fell slightly in early trading on Wednesday, setting the STOXX 600 for its first down-day in five and possibly signalling that markets need fresh positive catalysts to extend their bounce from October lows.

The missile incident in Poland and UK inflation at fresh 41-year highs clearly didn't provide any reason for investors to push prices higher. So, even as defence stocks rose on the prospect that military spending will remain high and energy got a boost from higher crude oil, red signs prevailed.

The pan-European equity benchmark index was last down 0.5%. Autos and rate sensitive real estate led sectoral fallers, down 2.9% and 2.7% respectively.

EUROPE EYES MUTED START (0738 GMT)

Stock index futures are pointing to a muted start in Europe this morning, recovering from an overnight drop after U.S. President Joe Biden said a missile that killed two people in Poland was probably not fired from Russia.

Euro STOXX 50 futures were last trading just above parity, while FTSE 100 futures inched 0.1% higher even as data showed UK inflation rose to a new 41-year high of 11.1% in October.

Trading in Asia was shaken by the missile blast in Poland, while U.S. futures were last edging slightly higher, adding to gains on Tuesday that were fuelled be benign inflation data.

In corporate news, early calls pointed to gains for aerospace contractor Senior and grocer Premier Foods following results. French train maker Alstom is also seen rising after cash flow and orders beat forecasts.

Siemens Energy scrapped its dividend after its net loss widened because of turmoil at its wind turbine division. Cruise operator Carnival is set for a difficult day after a $1 billion convertible bond offering whose proceeds will help it make principal payments on debt.

A MISSILE AND A MANIFESTO (0658 GMT)

U.S President Joe Biden said a missile that killed two people in Poland may not have been fired from Russia. That comment will be relief to a market rattled at the prospect of the war in Ukraine spilling over to neighbouring countries, but investor's nerves are frayed and they remain on guard.

A volatile round of trading overnight due to the explosion on Tuesday at a grain facility near the Ukrainian border has continued into Asian hours, with equities lower, the dollar on the front foot and gold prices hovering around a three-month peak.

Meanwhile, Donald Trump launched a bid to regain the presidency in 2024, a move that was widely expected and telegraphed. "Two years ago, we were a great nation and soon we will be a great nation again," he said in a speech that lasted little more than an hour. With the elections a couple of years away, markets didn't seem to care.

Britain is due on Wednesday to release inflation data for October that is expected to show consumer prices up 10.7% on a year earlier. The data will come just a day ahead of Finance minister Jeremy Hunt's autumn budget, which is expected to contain a raft of measures, including tax rises and spending cuts.

In the crypto world, the FTX saga rumbles on, with bankruptcy filings showing the collapsed exchange may have more than 1 million creditors. Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal reported that lender BlockFi was planning layoffs and a possible bankruptcy filing.

Key developments that could influence markets on Wednesday:

Economic events: CPI data from Britain and Italy

Speakers: ECB board member Frank Elderson, Edouard Fernandez-Bollo, BoE governor Andrew Bailey to be questioned by parliaments' Treasury committee

More News
11 Jul 2023 10:08

Britain's 50-billion pound pensions gamble could put savers in fresh peril

LONDON, July 11 (Reuters) - Britain's financial services industry has broadly cheered fresh government proposals to jumpstart the economy by channelling 50 billion pounds ($64.5 billion) of pension fund cash into fledgling firms, but the plans could backfire on savers, experts said.

Read more
10 Jul 2023 18:00

UK pension funds back next phase of post-Brexit City shake up

Private pensions pledge up to 50 billion pounds

*

Read more
10 Jul 2023 13:45

Allergy Therapeutics appoints new CFO; interim CFO to leave in August

(Alliance News) - Allergy Therapeutics PLC on Monday said it has promoted Group Financial Controller Shaun Furlong to chief financial officer.

Read more
9 Jul 2023 13:01

Hunt to outline "evolutionary" pension funds investment reforms for UK

(Alliance News) - UK Chancellor Jeremy Hunt will promise "evolutionary not revolutionary" reforms to get pension funds making billions of pounds of riskier investments in fast-growing firms to boost economic growth.

Read more
5 Jul 2023 12:07

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Stocks down; eyes on China slowdown, Fed minutes

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were lower at midday on Wednesday amid a solidly risk-off mood following a slew of weak economic data, including from the world's second-largest economy.

Read more
5 Jul 2023 10:22

Legal & General confirms five-year targets

(Sharecast News) - Legal & General Group reiterated its five-year growth targets on Wednesday, as it confirmed that recently introduced accountancy changes would not have any impact.

Read more
5 Jul 2023 09:00

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks head lower before Fed minutes

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened in the red on Wednesday, amid fears of slowing growth in China, and escalating tension between the two world's largest economies.

Read more
5 Jul 2023 08:22

TOP NEWS: Legal & General says on track to achieve five-year plan

(Alliance News) - Legal & General Group PLC on Wednesday set out a confident outlook and said it enjoyed a busy first-half of pension risk transfer dealings.

Read more
5 Jul 2023 07:59

LONDON BRIEFING: L&G confident; Supreme wins "significant" vaping pact

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are expected to open lower on Wednesday, as investors assess weaker Chinese economic data, and look ahead to the release of the latest US Federal Reserve meeting minutes.

Read more
30 Jun 2023 10:59

UK life insurers' exposure to Thames Water is 'minimal', Citi says

(Sharecast News) - Analysts at Citi pointed out on Thursday that the UK life insurance sector's direct exposure to Thames Water was "minimal".

Read more
20 Jun 2023 08:33

Lab crunch: British science has nowhere to go

OXFORD, England, June 20 (Reuters) - For Ros Deegan, the thrill of raising $100 million to expand a biotech firm among the dreaming spires of Oxford was soon tempered: unable to find a bigger laboratory, she routinely had to work at home.

Read more
15 Jun 2023 17:15

UK's FTSE 100 rises on energy boost; Informa jumps

ECB raises rates by an expected 25 bps

*

Read more
15 Jun 2023 11:12

Legal & General new CEO has "hard act to follow" after Wilson's tenure

(Alliance News) - Legal & General Group PLC on Thursday named its new chief executive, but Antonio Simoes has a "hard act to follow."

Read more
15 Jun 2023 09:15

Legal & General hires Santander's Antonio Simoes as CEO

Simoes will join the company on Jan. 1, 2024

*

Read more
15 Jun 2023 09:10

Santander appoints Castro e Almeida to drive growth in Europe

MADRID, June 15 (Reuters) - Santander said on Thursday it has appointed Pedro Castro e Almeida as regional head for Europe as the Spanish bank bets on this region to drive growth.

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.