The latest Investing Matters Podcast with Jean Roche, Co-Manager of Schroder UK Mid Cap Investment Trust has just been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksOcado Share News (OCDO)

Share Price Information for Ocado (OCDO)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 344.60
Bid: 344.40
Ask: 345.20
Change: 1.10 (0.32%)
Spread: 0.80 (0.232%)
Open: 344.40
High: 345.80
Low: 342.60
Prev. Close: 343.50
OCDO 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: Shares climb after another day of no bank frights

Thu, 30th Mar 2023 17:00

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed higher on Thursday, as equities continued to rally on the belief that a banking crisis has been averted.

Blue-chip European remain off where they were on March 9, the day before equities suffered a melt-down following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank. Equity markets are making a stellar recovery as the month draws to a close, however.

Riskier assets were on the up again in London, with retail and property firms among the FTSE 100's best-performers. Among mid-caps, a dramatic share price fall, then rise, for power generation firm Drax grabbed investor focus.

The FTSE 100 index added 56.16 points, 0.7%, at 7,620.43. The FTSE 250 surged 274.93 points, 1.5%, to 18,907.74. The AIM All-Share climbed 9.64 points, 1.2%, to 805.84.

The Cboe UK 100 ended up 0.9% at 761.98, the Cboe UK 250 added 1.7% at 16,506.30, and the Cboe Small Companies rose 0.2% to 13,276.39.

In European equities on Thursday, the CAC 40 in Paris surged 1.1%, while the DAX 40 in Frankfurt jumped 1.3%.

Equity markets have celebrated what has been a calm so far on the banking front. A slew of negative headlines in recent weeks, including the SVB failure and fears for Credit Suisse and Deutsche Bank have hurt markets.

This week has seen little to no unwelcome surprises, however.

Market confidence on Thursday meant there were broad-based gains for the FTSE 100 on Thursday. Property investor British Land added 4.2%, retailer JD Sports surged 4.3% and grocer Ocado jumped 9.4%.

Keeping a lid on the FTSE 100, were a handful of stocks that went ex-dividend. Among them were Aviva and Phoenix Group, falling 3.1% and 3.6%.

Away from banking sector calm, data from Europe and the US also lifted the mood on Thursday.

Inflation readings in Germany and Spain cooled, ahead of a wider eurozone reading on Friday.

In addition, a weaker reading of the US economy has added to hope that the Federal Reserve's hiking cycle may be nearing its end.

US economic growth for the fourth quarter of 2022 was downwardly revised, according to a third estimate from the Bureau of Economic Analysis on Thursday.

US gross domestic product expanded by 2.6% from the preceding quarter in the final three months of 2022. It is the second time growth for the fourth quarter has been downgraded. Growth of 2.9% was initially reported, before being revised to 2.7% in a second estimate.

"The revision primarily reflected downward revisions to exports and consumer spending," the BEA said.

Separate figures from the US Department of Labor showed initial claims for unemployment support were higher than expected last week.

Initial jobless claims in the week ended March 25 amounted to 198,000, increasing by 7,000 from 191,000 a week earlier. The figure topped FXStreet cited consensus of 196,000.

Societe Generale analyst Kit Juckes commented: "The Fed was caught flat-footed as easy money, constrained supply and strong demand boosted inflation last year. The scramble to raise rates far enough, fast enough, had unintended consequences. The Fed, in short, made an omelette out of Humpty-Dumpty and now they can't put Humpty back together, or prevent the knock-on to tighter lending standards after US regional banks saw deposit flight.

"Some analysts (and some at the Fed) will argue that rate hikes should continue until inflation is defeated. That sounds like a recipe for turning Humpty into scrambled eggs, and it seems more likely that we are near the end of the US rate-hiking cycle. But we may not be so close in Europe, where inflation will be as sticky, because demand remains strong, and there isn't a regional banking crisis.

The dollar was largely on the back foot on Thursday. The pound rose to USD1.2371 late Thursday, up from USD1.2326 on Wednesday. The euro surged to USD1.0900 from USD1.0834. Against the yen, however, the dollar rose to JPY132.69, from JPY132.51.

SocGen's Juckes added: "The prospect of divergence between Fed policy and that in Europe and Japan, is dollar-negative, all things being equal. The fact that the dollar is still at very elevated levels means there's room to fall, even if positioning data suggests the consensus is bearish already."

Friday's economic calendar has the eurozone inflation reading at 1000 BST on Friday, after a UK house price index reading from mortgage lender nationwide at 0700 BST.

Stocks in New York were higher at the time of the London equities close. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.3%, the S&P 500 added 0.5%, while the Nasdaq Composite surged 0.7%.

Back in London, Drax shares recovered and closed 1.1% higher. Shares in the power generator had slumped more than 10% earlier on Thursday.

Drax defended a biomass project which was snubbed by the UK government.

The Department for Energy Security & Net Zero said that Drax's power bioenergy with carbon capture and storage submission would not be one of eight projects selected for its track-1 programme.

The UK government noted that it will continue to engage with Drax's project, adding that "track-1 is not the extent of our ambition".

Drax said it believes its BECCS offering is the "only project that can enable the government to achieve" its aim of a yearly removal of five million tonnes of engineered greenhouse gases by 2030.

"With the right engagement from government and swift decision-making, Drax stands ready to progress our GBP2 billion investment programme and deliver this critical project for the UK by 2030," Chief Executive Officer Will Gardiner said.

Ithaca Energy fell 4.3%. It lowered its yearly output guidance due to the delayed start-up of one field, operational issues at another and the hit from a UK profit levy.

The North Sea oil and gas operator downgraded 2023 production guidance to 68,000 to 74,000 barrels of oil equivalent per day from a previous range of 72,000 to 80,000.

Ithaca said it achieved record production of 71,403 barrels of oil equivalent per day in 2022, which was up 26% from 2021. At worst, the new guidance would represent a 4.8% fall on 2022's production.

Elsewhere in London, Petrofac jumped 70%. Alongside Tokyo-listed Hitachi, the energy services company has been awarded a wind farm contract by Dutch-German grid operator TenneT. The deal is worth EUR13 billion.

The contract, which Petrofac said is the largest in its history, covers six projects, each worth over EUR2 billion. The multi-year framework agreement is part of TenneT's 2 gigawatt high-voltage direct current offshore wind programme.

Gold traded at USD1,972.45 an ounce around the time of the London equities close on Thursday, up from USD1,967.03 on Tuesday. A barrel of Brent oil fetched USD78.48, up slightly from USD78.37.

Friday's UK corporate diary has annual results from computer services firm Computacenter and lender Vanquis Banking Group. Flooring manufacturer James Halstead reports interim results.

By Eric Cunha, Alliance News news editor

Comments and questions to newsroom@alliancenews.com

Copyright 2023 Alliance News Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

More News
27 Jul 2023 08:15

Luke Jensen stepping down from Ocado Solutions

(Sharecast News) - Technology-driven online grocer Ocado Group announced the upcoming retirement of Luke Jensen, the current executive director and CEO of Ocado Solutions, on Thursday.

Read more
24 Jul 2023 17:09

UK's FTSE 100 edges higher on gains in energy shares

Vodafone Group up after Q1 results

*

Read more
24 Jul 2023 16:59

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 shakes off weak PMI readings

(Alliance News) - Blue-chip European equities took confidence from a decent open in New York, despite some less-than-stellar PMI data darkening the mood earlier on Monday.

Read more
24 Jul 2023 12:04

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: China stimulus impatience keeps lid on sentiment

(Alliance News) - Equity prices in Europe were mixed heading into Monday afternoon, with a warning of the challenges facing the Chinese economy hurting investor sentiment at the start of a busy week of central banking action.

Read more
24 Jul 2023 08:48

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Lower start with eyes on trio of rate decisions

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened largely lower on Monday as markets looked ahead to a week of interest decisions from three major central banks.

Read more
24 Jul 2023 07:51

LONDON BRIEFING: Stocks to open lower; Vodafone quarterly revenue dips

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are set to open lower on Monday, ahead of a busy week focused on key interest rate decisions from the three major central banks.

Read more
24 Jul 2023 07:33

Ocado to receive £200m from AutoStore in patent dispute settlement

(Sharecast News) - UK online supermarket Ocado has won a £200m settlement from Norwegian company AutoStore after a three-year legal battle over 'robot' patents.

Read more
23 Jul 2023 09:51

Ocado to be paid GBP200m in deal to settle robot patent case

(Alliance News) - Online supermarket Ocado Group PLC is to be paid GBP200 million in a deal with Norwegian warehouse automation firm AutoStore AS, which accused it of breaching patents.

Read more
22 Jul 2023 14:41

AutoStore and Ocado reach deal to settle patent litigation claims

July 22 (Reuters) - Norwegian robotics firm AutoStore will pay 200 million pounds ($257.1 million) to British online supermarket group Ocado as part of a deal between the warehouse tech pioneers to settle all outstanding patent litigation claims, they said on Saturday.

Read more
22 Jul 2023 13:58

AutoStore, Ocado settle all patent litigation claims

July 22 (Reuters) - AutoStore Holdings and Ocado Group have reached an agreement to settle all patent litigation claims between them, the two firms said on Saturday. (Reporting by Anirudh Saligrama in Bengaluru; editing by Jason Neely)

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
19 Jul 2023 09:17

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Exane raises Segro; Goldman likes Aston Martin

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

Read more
18 Jul 2023 17:27

European shares boosted by Novartis, telecom stocks slide

STOXX 600 up 0.6%, Swiss stocks outshine peers

*

Read more
18 Jul 2023 17:04

UK stocks end higher on US bank earnings cheer, homebuilders rally

Homebuilders log best day in five months

*

Read more
18 Jul 2023 16:49

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks upbeat ahead of key UK inflation print

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London ended firmly in the green on Tuesday, with the FTSE 100 lifted by a strong performance from housebuilding stocks and a very well-received update from online grocer and warehouse technology firm Ocado.

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.