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Pin to quick picksMarks & Spencer Share News (MKS)

Share Price Information for Marks & Spencer (MKS)

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Share Price: 294.20
Bid: 294.10
Ask: 294.40
Change: 20.40 (7.45%)
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Open: 293.00
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LIVE MARKETS-Bearish expectations at highest in six months: AAII Survey

Fri, 20th Aug 2021 17:27

* Nasdaq, S&P 500, Dow in green

* Utilities lead all S&P sectors higher

* European STOXX 600 closes up ~0.3%

* Bitcoin surges, gold up; dollar, oil slip

* U.S. 10-year Treasury yield ~1.25%

Aug 20 - 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

BEARISH EXPECTATIONS AT HIGHEST IN SIX MONTHS: AAII SURVEY
(1230 EDT/1630 GMT)

Bearish sentiment, or expectations stock prices will fall
the next 180 days, is at its highest in more than six months,
while the outlook of investors who are "bullish" pulled back,
the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) said.

Bearish sentiment rose 3.6 percentage points to 35.1% and
was last higher on Feb. 3 at 35.6%, AAII said in its latest
sentiment survey.

The rise marks the third consecutive week and the fourth
time in 28 weeks that bearish sentiment is above the historical
average of 30.5%, AAII said.

Bullish sentiment, or expectations stock prices will rise
the next six months, fell 3.8 percentage points to 33.2%, AAII
said. The decline is the sixth consecutive week that optimism is
below the historical average of 38.0%.

Expectations stock prices will stay essentially unchanged
over the next six months rose 0.2 percentage points to 31.7%.
Neutral sentiment has been at or above its historical average of
31.5% for 16 of the past 17 weeks, AAII said.

All three readings - bullish, bearish and neutral - are
within their typical historical ranges.

(Herbert Lash)

*****

LOW RISK OF HIGH-YIELD BOND DEFAULTS AHEAD - BOFA (1145
EDT/1545 GMT)

The risk of high-yield corporate bond defaults over the next
12 months is relatively low, while valuations in some sectors
have improved, according to a BofA Global Research report on
Friday.
The energy, utilities and media sectors have the highest
projected default rates at around 3.5%, which "are moderately
low by historical standards," the report said.

Metals, food producers, retail and real estate sectors have
the lowest projected rates at around 1%, although BofA noted
that "realistically speaking," zero defaults are likely for most
of them.

Sectors with the highest projected total returns over the
next 12 months included gaming, transportation, cable, services
and travel.

"This picture reinforces our view that valuations in some of
the key reopening sectors have returned to attractive levels,
compensating investors for increased risks associated with the
delta variant; this includes gaming, transports and travel," the
report said.

The telecoms, metals, and technology sectors have the lowest
projected total returns.

The spread on the ICE BofA U.S. High Yield Index,
a commonly used benchmark for the junk bond market, was up 7
basis points on Thursday at 342 basis points, the highest level
since early August, according to Refinitiv data.

It hit a multi-month high of 344 basis points on July 19.

(Karen Pierog)

*****

TWO STEPS FORWARD, ONE STEP BACK: THE DELTA DETOUR (1030
EDT/1430 GMT)
The unwelcome and highly contagious Delta variant of COVID-19
appears to have tossed a temporary monkey wrench into the U.S.
recovery from its most abrupt recession in history.

Global financial information firm Oxford Economics' (OE)
most recent Recovery Tracker fell 0.3 percentage points to 96.4%
from where it was in January 2020, before efforts to contain the
pandemic hobbled the global economy.

"Greater consumer caution weakened demand and mobility,
which fell to multi-week lows," writes Gregory Daco, chief U.S.
economist at OE. "Employment soured, production retrenched, and
the health tracker fell on surging Delta variant contagion."

OE follows 23 discrete metrics and groups them into six
baskets: financial, mobility, production, employment, demand,
and health.

In the week ended Aug. 6 - the most recent data point
available - five of those groupings edged lower.

"Contractions in five of the six subcomponents signal that
gains will be harder to come by as we move past peak growth,"
Daco adds. "Robust future gains will be harder to come by until
health conditions improve.

The demand tracker suffered the biggest drop, pulled down
1.7 ppts by decreased hotel occupancy, credit/debit card
spending and restaurant bookings. Weaker gasoline demand and a
pull-back in commercial air traffic were behind the 1.6 ppt
slide in the mobility component, according to the note.

The health element lost 0.5 ppts due to an increases in new
COVID cases per million and the positive test rate.

For Reuters' interactive graphic on the worldwide vaccine
rollout, click here https://graphics.reuters.com/world-coronavirus-tracker-and-maps/vaccination-rollout-and-access.

The employment and production trackers shed 0.3 ppts each.

The financial component was the sole gainer, adding 2.3 ppts
as equities scaled new heights and Treasuries traded in a
tightened range, the note says.

The chart below, courtesy of OE, shows a history of the
recovery tracker broken down by its six major components:

(Stephen Culp)

*****

WHAT ABOUT INFLATION, THE TAPER WHEN WALL STREET GAINS?
(1010 EDT/1410 GMT)

The Nasdaq, S&P 500 and Dow rose on Friday as investors
shrugged off concerns about inflation, the Federal Reserve's
plans to taper its bond purchases and a jump in COVID-19 cases.

Before the gains on Friday, the Dow and the S&P 500 were on
course for their worst week since mid-June.

Information technology followed by healthcare
led nine of the 11 S&P sectors higher, with energy
leading declining shares.

Investors have been wrestling with what Art Hogan, chief
market strategist at National Securities, calls a cauldron of
concerns that is juxtaposed with a market hovering near all-time
highs in a month that has been historically investor unfriendly.

"The natural instinct of some investors has been to lean
into the negative narrative and take profits," Hogan said in his
morning note.

Growth-oriented shares outpaced economically sensivite value
stocks, with the Russell 1000 Growth index up 0.77% and the
Russell 1000 Value index gaining 0.24%.

In Europe, the broad STOXX Europe 600 index rose
0.37%.

Here is where markets stand in early trade:

(Herbert Lash)

*****

CHINA ADRS FUEL WORST 6-MONTH HEDGE FUND PERFORMANCE SINCE
2008 (0900 EDT/1300 GMT)

Unusually weak performance at high risk but high return
funds in the past six months can be chalked up to China ADRs, as
they made up one-third of the most popular hedge funds' long
positions, research by Goldman Sachs shows.

A basket of VIP hedge funds lagged the S&P 500
by 13 percentage points over the last six months,
matching late 2008 as its worst stretch on record, GS
strategists wrote in a note.

In fact, U.S.-listed China stocks reeling from an onslaught
of tightening regulation in Beijing has put the Invesco Golden
Dragon China ETF on path for its longest streak of
weekly losses in a decade.

Among FAAMG names: Amazon.com Inc ranked as one of
the "rising star" stocks with the largest increase in hedge fund
popularity last quarter, while Microsoft Corp landed in
the "falling stars" list of declining popularity, strategists
said.

A basket of stocks with the highest short interest as a
share of float (.GSCBMSAL) has underperformed the S&P 500 by 16
percentage points since late June alongside a decline in retail
trading activity, strategists note.

Meanwhile, hedge funds rotated modestly toward growth stocks
in Q2, ending a sharp year-long move toward value stocks,
according to the report.

(Medha Singh)

*****

FOR FRIDAY'S LIVE MARKETS' POSTS PRIOR TO 0900 EDT/1300 GMT -
CLICK HERE:

More News
29 Sep 2023 10:58

BofA Merrill Lynch upgrades Marks & Spencer to 'buy'

(Sharecast News) - Bank of America Merrill Lynch upgraded Marks & Spencer on Friday to 'buy' from 'neutral' as it argued the stock is still too cheap and consensus earnings too low.

Read more
29 Sep 2023 09:15

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Goldman Sachs cuts WPP; Shore raises LandSec

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

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22 Sep 2023 08:42

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks slip after central bank rate calls

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened lower on Friday, but managed to avoid the steep declines seen in New York, as investors mulled over an eventful week dominated by central bank decisions.

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21 Sep 2023 12:20

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Sterling slumps as BoE ends hiking streak

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London perked up heading into Thursday afternoon after the Bank of England, like the Federal Reserve, decided against a hike, hurting the pound.

Read more
19 Sep 2023 14:22

Director dealings: M&S non-exec invests, Brooks Macdonald CEO deals with options

(Sharecast News) - Marks & Spencer was among those on the list of director buys on Tuesday after a non-executive director picked up more than 9,000 shares.

Read more
19 Sep 2023 07:03

Ocado holds guidance as Q3 retail sales rise 7.2%

(Sharecast News) - Online grocer and technology company Ocado maintained annual guidance after a 7.2% rise in third-quarter retail revenues.

Read more
13 Sep 2023 09:29

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Goldman Sachs likes HSBC; RBC raises CVS

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

Read more
13 Sep 2023 07:48

LONDON BRIEFING: St James's Place appoints new chief Mark FitzPatrick

(Alliance News) - Stocks are called to open lower on Wednesday, as traders remain cautious ahead of a highly awaited US inflation report.

Read more
12 Sep 2023 08:46

TOP NEWS: UK grocery price inflation cools to lowest level in a year

(Alliance News) - Annual grocery price inflation in the UK decelerated to 12.2% in the four weeks that ended September 3, from 12.7% a month before, according to survey data from Kantar on Tuesday.

Read more
11 Sep 2023 06:56

UK retailers warn chancellor against GBP400m business rates hike

(Alliance News) - Bosses of a raft of Britain's biggest retailers, such as Tesco PLC, Marks & Spencer Group PLC and Kingfisher PLC's B&Q, have urged Chancellor Jeremy Hunt to freeze their property taxes to avoid a roughly GBP400 million hike.

Read more
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

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