Roundtable Discussion; The Future of Mineral Sands. Watch the video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksNatwest Share News (NWG)

Share Price Information for Natwest (NWG)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 305.00
Bid: 304.30
Ask: 304.50
Change: 1.80 (0.59%)
Spread: 0.20 (0.066%)
Open: 304.90
High: 307.20
Low: 304.00
Prev. Close: 303.20
NWG 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 MIDDAY: Stocks down as investors await US inflation data

Fri, 10th Jun 2022 12:17

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were lower at midday on Friday with market focus squarely on the upcoming US consumer price index report at 1330 BST.

The FTSE 100 index was down 87.83 points, or 1.2%, at 7,388.48. The mid-cap FTSE 250 index was down 195.88 points, or 1.0%, at 19,879.21. The AIM All-Share index was down 4.48 points, or 0.5%, at 960.74.

The Cboe UK 100 index was down 1.2% at 736.04. The Cboe 250 was down 1.4% at 17,547.62, and the Cboe Small Companies was down 0.8% at 14,639.25.

In mainland Europe, the CAC 40 in Paris was down 1.5% and the DAX 40 in Frankfurt was down 1.6%.

New York was pointed to a mixed open, following steep loses on Thursday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was called down 0.3% and the S&P 500 down 0.2%, but the Nasdaq Composite was pointed up 0.1%. The indices had closed down 1.3%, 2.4%, and 2.8% respectively on Thursday.

A hotter-than-expected inflation print is likely to hurry the Federal Reserve along on its path of aggressive monetary policy tightening, ahead of the US central bank's interest rate decision next week. Last month, the Fed enacted its first over 50-basis-point hike since May 2000.

Elevated levels of inflation have posed one of the biggest headaches so far for the Biden administration in Washington, as soaring prices take a toll on American households. The annual inflation rate remained close to a 40-year high in April, leaving consumers struggling to afford necessities including food, shelter and fuel.

On Thursday, the European Central Bank belatedly joined the global policy tightening shift, announcing the end of its bond-buying programme and signalling it will hike interest rates several times this year.

Nick Chatters, investment manager at Aegon Asset Management, commented: "US inflation today will be a key data point for the market this week. Yesterday, the ECB signalled a hawkish path of policy to come, as did the Fed earlier in the year, but today could give Powell and company a fright if inflation surprises to the upside yet again. To be clear, they are looking for 'clear and convincing evidence' that inflation in the US is going to start falling back from its eye watering level."

Economists at Lloyds Bank said they expect the headline annual inflation rate to continue to slow, to 8.2% in May from 8.3% in April and 8.5% in March.

The core rate of inflation is seen falling to 5.9% from 6.2% in April and 6.5% in March. They said risks for the headline figure are skewed to the upside, due to the recent rise in energy prices.

"Core inflation seems more likely to have declined but there will be considerable interest in whether services inflation is continuing to accelerate. That would be an indication that inflationary pressures are broadening out," Lloyds said. "Overall, the report is not expected to ease the pressure on the Federal Reserve to continue to raise interest rates."

The CME Fedwatch service suggests markets are putting a 92% chance on another half-point rise this month to 1.5%.

In the FTSE 100, GSK was up 0.5% after the drugmaker unveiled positive pivotal phase three data for its respiratory syncytial virus vaccine candidate AReSVi 006 for adults.

The RSV vaccine candidate showed statistically "significant and clinically meaningful efficacy" in adults aged 60 years and above, GSK explained.

GSK said interim analysis was reviewed by an Independent Data Monitoring Committee, and the primary endpoint was exceeded with no unexpected safety concerns observed.

In the FTSE 250 index, Apax Global was the best performer, up 9.0%, after it said the Apax X Fund has sold its controlling stake in MyCase to AffiniPay.

Apax Global Alpha is a limited partner in the X Fund; it allows investors access to a portfolio of private equity funds advised by London-based Apax Partners.

X Fund acquired MyCase, which provides legal practice management software and integrated payments to legal professionals, in 2020.

Apax Global Alpha said that the sale values its current look-through investment in MyCase at around EUR22.5 million. This represents an increase of approximately 48% compared to the last unaffected valuation and an uplift of around EUR7.3 million in the adjusted net asset value of Apax Global Alpha at March 31, it added.

Elsewhere in London, ProCook was down 40% at 47.10p. The kitchenware retailer said trading has been hurt by increasingly challenging market conditions, with customers affected by "exceptional pressures" on discretionary spending.

The stock listed on the London Main Market back in November at an initial public offering price of 145.00p so is down by two-thirds in six months.

For the fourth quarter, which ended April 3, ProCook said it was trading against "exceptionally strong comparatives" from the prior year, when it benefited from pent-up demand following the lifting of Covid-19 restrictions and the reopening of retail stores.

The retailer said like-for-like sales have weakened across all channels, in line with the wider kitchenware market, though revenue remains "significantly higher" than the comparative pre-Covid period in 2019.

ProCook now expects to deliver adjusted pretax profit of between GBP4 million to GBP6 million for financial 2023. It didn't provide its adjusted pretax profit figure for financial 2022. In the first half of financial 2022, the six months that ended October 21 last year, underlying pretax profit was GBP3.6 million.

The Bank of England said the UK's high street banks are no longer "too big to fail" after it completed its assessment of the the eight "major" lenders in the country.

In its Resolvability Assessment Framework, the UK central bank said shareholders and investors, and not taxpayers, are in line to "bear the costs" if any bank suffers a collapse.

"In 2007-08, the UK did not have a regime to enable resolving banks without the use of public money. This left two choices when some got into trouble: let banks fail and cause huge disruption or bail them out with taxpayers' money," the BoE said.

Now, however, the central bank said it now has a "robust" framework to deal with the fallout of a banking crisis. The eight banks to take part in the assessment were HSBC, Barclays, NatWest, Lloyds Banking, Standard Chartered, Banco Santander's UK operations, Virgin Money UK and Nationwide Building Society.

HSBC was down 1.2%, Barclays down 0.9%, NatWest down 1.0%, Lloyds down 0.9%, Standard Chartered down 1.0%, and VMUK down 2.7%.

Banco Santander was down 4.1% in Madrid.

The pound was quoted at USD1.2450 at midday on Friday, down from USD1.2536 at the London equities close Thursday.

The euro was priced at USD1.0608, down from USD1.0657. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at JPY133.76 in London, lower against JPY134.16.

Brent oil was quoted at USD124.07 a barrel Friday at midday, up from USD123.37 late Thursday. Gold stood at USD1,843.75 an ounce, up slightly from USD1,842.36.

By Arvind Bhunjun; arvindbhunjun@alliancenews.com

Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

More News
1 Mar 2024 12:10

eEnergy shares surge on 18-month recovery and NatWest funding

(Alliance News) - eEnergy Group PLC on Friday announced an "exciting" funding deal with NatWest Group PLC, and expects to report GBP46 million in revenue for its latest year and a half.

Read more
1 Mar 2024 08:15

IN BRIEF: National Bank of Australia CEO Ross McEwan to join BHP board

BHP Group Ltd - Melbourne, Australia-based miner - Appoints Ross McEwan as a non-executive director, starting April 3. McEwan is the chief executive officer of National Bank of Australia Ltd. He will retire as the CEO of NAB, effective from July 1. McEwan also joins Farnborough, Hampshire-based defence technology firm QinetiQ Group PLC as non-executive director from Friday. He served as CEO of Royal Bank of Scotland Group, now named NatWest Group PLC, from 2013 to 2019.

Read more
22 Feb 2024 09:59

CORRECT: Lloyds profit rises but books GBP450 million probe provision

(Correcting sum of Lloyds Banking Group PLC's final dividend.)

Read more
22 Feb 2024 08:24

TOP NEWS: Lloyds profit rises but books GBP450 million probe provision

(Alliance News) - Lloyds Banking Group PLC on Thursday reported an annual profit surge and announced a new share buyback, though it said it has booked a provision in connection to a UK watchdog probe on historic motor finance arrangements.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 16:52

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Pound boosted after BoE's Bailey talks rate cuts

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed lower on Tuesday, whilst the pound bounced back, after the Bank of England's Andrew Bailey talked interest rate cuts.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 11:57

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Banking stocks drag FTSE 100 into green

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were mixed at midday Tuesday, after a busy morning of corporate updates and earnings.

Read more
20 Feb 2024 09:40

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: JPMorgan cuts Airtel Africa price target by 28%

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

Read more
20 Feb 2024 08:52

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks slide; banks rise as Barclays outperforms

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened in the red on Tuesday, as European markets failed to find upward momentum amid muted trading in Asia, and Monday's public holiday in the US.

Read more
19 Feb 2024 16:51

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Europe lacks direction on quiet Monday

(Alliance News) - European markets lacked direction on Monday, after a quiet day as the US markets celebrated George Washington's birthday.

Read more
19 Feb 2024 10:29

IN BRIEF: NatWest starts GBP300 million share buyback programme

NatWest Group PLC - Edinburgh-based bank - Starts share buyback programme of up to GBP300 million with a nominal value of around GBP1.08 per share. The programme will run until maximum July 18. The maximum amount of shares NatWest will buy back is around 696.7 million. NatWest had previously announced the share buyback programme last week Friday when it released its 2023 results.

Read more
19 Feb 2024 09:24

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: UBS cuts Howden Joinery; Jefferies likes SSE

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

Read more
16 Feb 2024 16:51

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 jumps on hotter-than-expected US PPI

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed higher on Friday, finishing the week on a positive note, as investors digest the latest set of US inflation data.

Read more
16 Feb 2024 14:59

London close: Stocks rise as UK retail sales rebound

(Sharecast News) - London's stock markets saw positive gains on Friday, buoyed by encouraging UK retail sales data and favourable earnings reports from NatWest.

Read more
16 Feb 2024 12:07

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Stocks up as UK retail sales soften GDP jitters

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were up strongly at midday on Friday, buoyed by UK retail sales data that came in far better than expected and soothed worries about the economy after numbers on Thursday showed it entered recession last year.

Read more
16 Feb 2024 08:41

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks climb amid UK retail sales surprise

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened higher on Friday morning, after a sentiment-boosting UK retail sales reading which calmed some nerves about the economy.

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.