REMINDER: Our user survey closes on Friday, please submit your responses here

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksMarks & Spencer Share News (MKS)

Share Price Information for Marks & Spencer (MKS)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 263.00
Bid: 262.90
Ask: 263.10
Change: 1.90 (0.73%)
Spread: 0.20 (0.076%)
Open: 263.70
High: 264.90
Low: 262.30
Prev. Close: 261.10
MKS Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Hedge funds bet British retailers' troubles will deepen

Wed, 16th Jan 2013 16:13

* UK retail stocks top shorts in FTSE 250

* Online spending, falling consumer demand, hits retailers

* Dozens of UK, U.S. funds bet against well-known brands

By Tommy Wilkes

LONDON, Jan 16 (Reuters) - Hedge funds are betting that aprolonged consumer squeeze and a further shift to onlineshopping could spell trouble for Britain's retail chains, andare targeting some of its best-known electrical, clothes andsupermarket stores.

With the economic downturn and government tax hikes eatinginto consumer spending, many hedge funds believe that less moneyto go round will mean few firms emerge unscathed.

High street entertainment retailer HMV and rivalBlockbuster UK called in the administrators this week, both hithard by customers moving online to buy music orDVDs.

Electricals firm Dixons, Argos owner Home Retail, and supermarket giants Tesco and J Sainsbury are among those whose stocks are being shorted byfunds, data for bets outstanding as at Jan. 14 published byBritain's Financial Services Authority shows.

Dixons, which has made one half-year profit in Britain andIreland in five years, faces an existential threat from internetrivals, one fund manager said.

"They can't differentiate their products and they can'toffer a lower cost product offering. It makes it very difficultfor them," he said.

Dixons' rival Comet went into administration late last year,while camera specialist Jessops became the first high-profilefailure of 2013 when it called in administrators, closing 187stores with the loss of 1,370 jobs.

In other industries, while predictions are lesscatastrophic, firms targeting middle-income customers willstruggle, fund managers and analysts say.

Top-end clothes and food retailers still appeal to wealthyshoppers, while firms such as Associated British Foods' discount clothing business Primark are winning overcost-conscious consumers in tough economic times.

In the key food sector, for example, upmarket Waitrose, partof the John Lewis Partnership, as well as discount chains Aldiand Lidl, saw strong sales growth just as Morrison andSainsbury's posted disappointing performances for the Christmasperiod.

SHORT-SELLERS

The top five most shorted stocks in the FTSE 250 - asmeasured by the percentage of their shares outstanding on loan,a common measure of short-selling interest - are all retailstocks, according to research from Markit.

Short-selling is the practice of betting on a price to fall.Managers can profit from their view by borrowing shares andselling them in the hope of being able to buy the share back ata cheaper price before returning it to its original owner.

Hedge funds are notoriously shy about revealing - even toclients - the reasons for shorting a certain stock. Most do notpublish details of their shorts in monthly letters that list thefund's top holdings and are sent out to investors.

Shorting also remains a controversial practice after manyfunds were blamed for exacerbating volatility during the heightof the 2008 financial crisis by betting against shaky banks.Supporters say short-selling improves the efficiency of markets.

Odey Asset Management, one of London's best-known funds, andthe U.S. firm Lone Pine Capital, are among at least nine fundswith bets against Home Retail, which is reinventing its troubledArgos business for the digital age, the FSA data showed.

Lone Pine built up its short position to 1.41 percentearlier this month while Odey has a position of 0.51 percent.

Lee Ainslie's Maverick Capital, a veteran stock-picker, isholding a huge 4.45 percent short - equivalent to about $70million - in Home Retail.

Meanwhile, Lansdowne Partners, which manages around $12billion in assets and runs the largest European hedge fundfocused on shares, has a 0.57 percent short position in Tesco,Britain's biggest supermarket chain, according to the FSA data.

Lansdowne has also built shorts of 2.51 and 0.6 percentagainst rivals WM Morrison and Sainsbury's respectively, thedata showed, as well as a hefty 2.73 percent bet against220-year old books and stationery seller WHSmith.

The FSA has published its list of all short positions thatreach 0.5 percent or more of a company's issued share capitalsince Nov. 1, following the introduction of European Union rulesto improve transparency.

ONLINE VERSUS HIGH STREET

Elsewhere, AKO Capital, BlackRock Investment Management andSoroban Capital Partners are shorting Marks and Spencer.Last week the retailer reported worse-than-expected non-foodChristmas sales.

According to the data, hedge funds are also betting againstloss-making baby products retailer Mothercare andfloor-covering firm Carpetright.

"Disposable income in the UK is still being squeezedmercilessly: wage growth is currently running at less than halfthe rate of inflation ... One way or another, shoppers in the UKhave less money to spend and they are increasingly circumspectof how they spend what remains," Mike Ingram, a market analystat BGC Brokers, wrote in a note on Tuesday.

Not all the hedge fund bets against retailers have gonetheir way. Shares in Home Retail, for example, rose by more thana third last year as investors reacted positively to thecompany's plans to restructure Argos for the digital age.

Many have also faced a "short squeeze" when results thatsurprise to the upside suddenly send shares hurtling higher,making it more costly for hedge funds to return the share theyborrowed from its original owner.

And while the focus of bets have been on the High Street,some have targeted online retailers too, often at a loss.

"There's been a general view for some time among funds thatit's better to be long online retail and short the bricks andmortar," one hedge fund investor said.

"Managers have found it a lot easier to get their headsround (high street shops) and see that some of these guys arestruggling and will even go out of business."

But at least 11 hedge funds including Steve Cohen's $14billion SAC Capital are taking aim at Ocado, with manybelieving the upmarket online grocery business will struggle tobe profitable. Shares in the group, however, finished last yearup by around 50 percent after falling heavily in 2011.

The value of shares in ASOS, the online fashionretailer, and also the target of short-sellers, doubled in 2012as sales grew.

More News
6 Sep 2023 09:32

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Shore says 'buy' B&M; Peel Hunt likes Halfords

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

Read more
6 Sep 2023 09:02

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks fall amid high oil prices

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened lower on Wednesday, as high oil prices gave rise to fears of renewed inflationary pressures and interest rate hikes.

Read more
31 Aug 2023 17:02

Miners drag FTSE 100 lower to snap 6-day winning streak

Glencore among top losers on FTSE 100

*

Read more
31 Aug 2023 16:50

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 down amid stubborn US inflation

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed mixed on Thursday, after news that a key US inflation reading came in in line with market expectations.

Read more
31 Aug 2023 12:00

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: FTSE 100 edges lower ahead of US inflation print

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 tipped into the red at midday on Thursday as investors nervously awaited the latest print of the US Federal Reserve's preferred inflationary gauge, the personal consumption expenditures index.

Read more
31 Aug 2023 07:49

LONDON BRIEFING: Stocks seen higher; Grafton begins another buyback

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are set to open higher on Thursday as market focus turns to inflation and whether it is cooling enough to justify a pause in September from the European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve.

Read more
30 Aug 2023 17:55

TOP NEWS: M&S returns to FTSE 100 after four years, Persimmon exits

(Alliance News) - FTSE Russell confirmed on Wednesday that the following changes will take effect to its UK indices from the market open on Monday, September 18, after completing its quarterly review.

Read more
29 Aug 2023 17:00

Miners, homebuilders boost FTSE 100 to 2-weeks high

FTSE 100 hits 2-week high

*

Read more
29 Aug 2023 09:27

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: UBS cuts HSBC; Barclays cuts SDCL Energy

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

Read more
23 Aug 2023 10:24

Britain's Ocado Retail and Sainsbury's cut prices again

Ocado Retail cuts prices of 200 products

*

Read more
23 Aug 2023 08:54

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks rise ahead of Jackson Hole, Nvidia results

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened higher on Wednesday, as the mood in European markets continued to improve.

Read more
23 Aug 2023 07:09

Dechra, Hikma, M&S and Diploma set to join FTSE 100

MILAN, Aug 23 (Reuters) - Drugmakers Dechra and Hikma, along with retailer Marks & Spencer and technical products provider Diploma are set to join the UK's blue-chip FTSE 100 index in September, indicative changes announced by FTSE Russell show.

Read more
23 Aug 2023 00:01

Britain's Ocado Retail cuts prices again

Heinz beans, Quaker oats among price reductions

*

Read more
22 Aug 2023 17:26

TOP NEWS: M&S set to be FTSE 100 outfit again but Persimmon may fall

(Alliance News) - Marks & Spencer Group PLC is primed to make a return to London's premier FTSE 100 index, roughly three years after the founding member was booted out, with abrdn PLC once again among those making way.

Read more
22 Aug 2023 17:13

Cyclical stocks lift UK equities off six-week lows; Wood Group rises

Blue-chip FTSE 100 snaps seven-day losing streak

*

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.