Rainbow Rare Earths Phalaborwa project shaping up to be one of the lowest cost producers globally. Watch the video 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: 311.40
Bid: 311.50
Ask: 312.20
Change: 1.40 (0.45%)
Spread: 0.70 (0.225%)
Open: 314.00
High: 323.30
Low: 305.60
Prev. Close: 310.00
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 MIDDAY: Stocks mixed as BP and Ocado contrast

Tue, 08th Feb 2022 12:36

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were mixed on Tuesday at midday as investors digested earnings from a slew of blue-chip names.

Across the Atlantic, drug maker Pfizer reported earnings before the open in New York, as did reported takeover target Peloton Interactive.

The FTSE 100 index was up 10.65 points, or 0.1%, at 7,584.12. The mid-cap FTSE 250 index was down 9.95 points, or 0.1%, at 21,787.34. The AIM All-Share index was down 2.18 points, 0.2%, at 1,083.46.

The Cboe UK 100 index was down 0.1% at 752.90. The Cboe 250 was down 0.3% at 19,438.76, and the Cboe Small Companies was 0.2% higher at 15,381.12.

On the continent, the CAC 40 stock index in Paris was up 0.4% and the DAX 40 in Frankfurt was 0.1% higher.

"The UK market was driven by miners, oil producers, financials and utilities, helped by well-received figures from BP," said AJ Bell's Russ Mould.

"Inflation figures from the US on Thursday will be a major influence on the direction of markets as the figures will be digested by the Federal Reserve in its next decision on whether to raise interest rates or not. With expectations that inflationary pressures are going to get worse in the near-term, markets could get jittery as we approach the data release."

In the FTSE 100, miners Anglo American, Glencore and Rio Tinto were up 2.9%, 2.7% and 2.2% respectively.

St James's Place was up 2.1%, after Morgan Stanley raised the wealth manager to 'overweight' from 'equal weight'.

M&G was up 1.5%. Morgan Stanley also raised the asset manager to 'overweight' from 'equal weight'.

BP rose 0.7%. The oil major hailed a year of "performing while transforming" as it posted a swing back to profit on improved oil prices after a pandemic-battered 2020.

At the same time, BP set out plans to accelerate its move to net zero and plough a greater proportion of funds into businesses such as electric vehicle charging, renewables and hydrogen.

Underlying replacement cost profit for the fourth quarter of 2021 was USD4.07 billion, surging from just USD115 million a year before.

Based on an average Brent price of USD60 a barrel, BP expects to be able to deliver share buybacks of around USD4.0 billion a year and have room for an annual dividend uplift of 4% through 2025.

For the fourth quarter of 2021, BP declared a dividend per share of 5.46 cents, up 4.0% from 5.25 cents a year ago, bringing 2021's total to 21.63 cents, down 18% from 26.35 cents in 2020. It completed share buybacks worth USD1.73 billion in the fourth quarter, and plans to carry out a further USD1.5 billion from surplus cash flow before announcing its first quarter results for 2022.

SSE was up 0.6% after the energy utility upgraded its expectations for adjusted earnings per share following a strong performance in the year so far.

The Perth, Scotland-based firm now expects adjusted earnings per share of at least 90 pence for its financial year ending March 31, up from previous guidance of at least 83p. SSE attributed this to strength and stability from its "balanced mix of regulated and market facing businesses".

Strong performances were seen from its flexible thermal and hydro plants. This helped to offset renewables output that had come at only 81% of planned levels of 7,304 gigawatt hours at 5,920 gigawatt hours for the nine months to December 31. This was also 16% lower than the output in the comparable period of the year before of 7,046 gigawatt hours.

At the other end of the large-caps, Ocado was the biggest faller, down 10%. The online grocer pointed to labour shortages for containing growth, as it struggled to find workers to keep up with increased demand.

However, it hailed its new technologies as the retailer ramps up investment into its end-to-end e-commerce, fulfilment and logistics Ocado Smart Platform.

For the financial year that ended November 28, Ocado generated revenue of GBP2.5 billion, up 7.2% from GBP2.33 billion in financial 2020. The figure was in line with market forecasts.

The Hatfield-based firm posted a pretax loss of GBP176.9 million, widened from a loss of GBP52.3 million. Ocado said the loss reflected increased investment in its Solutions business, particularly the increasing roll out of the Ocado Smart Platform.

Looking ahead, Ocado said capital expenditure is set to rise to around GBP800 million in 2022, driven by the worldwide roll-out of its platform. This was higher than the GBP590 million expected by analysts at Jefferies.

Chris Beckett, head of equity research at Quilter, commented: "Ocado's 2022 guidance includes increased costs set to support long-term growth and higher capital expenditure that will more than halve the GBP1.5 billion cash balance. Ultimately, this is a growth stock that needs new orders to justify the valuation. This will likely come, but timing remains uncertain."

Airtel Africa was the second worst FTSE 100 performer, down 9.6% at 140.09 pence. Citigroup Global Markets said it placed 58 million shares of Airtel Africa, a 1.5% stake, on behalf of shareholders Warburg Pincus and Morningstar Investment. The shares were sold at 140p each, raising GBP81.2 million.

Citigroup didn't say how many Airtel Africa shares the two sellers have remaining, but noted they have agreed to a 90-day lock-up period for any they own. Airtel Africa won't receive any proceeds of the sale, as it was of existing shares.

DCC was down 2.1%. The support services firm said operating profit for the third quarter ended December 31 was in line with expectations and ahead of the prior year.

The Dublin-based company said it delivered a good trading performance and benefited from acquisitions completed in the prior year. Looking ahead, DCC continues to expect that the financial year ending March 31 will be another year of strong operating profit growth, in line with current market consensus expectations.

In the FTSE 250, Micro Focus International was the worst performer, down 13%, after the enterprise software group said revenue had continued to decline in financial 2021.

The Newbury, England-based firm said revenue slipped in the year that ended October 31 to USD2.9 billion from USD3.0 billion the year before. However, Micro Focus noted the rate of decline had improved year on year, dropping by 5% compared to 10% in the previous year on a constant currency basis.

On AIM, Numis Corp was down 3.7% after the stock broker revealed a slower start to its second quarter amid damped risk appetite among investors concerned by surging inflation and rising interest rates.

Numis said: "Mounting inflation and interest rate concerns have impacted broader equity markets in recent weeks, with a reduction in investor risk appetite and capital markets activity. As such, we have had a slower start to our second quarter, albeit our pipeline and outlook for the second half across both M&A and Capital Markets is encouraging."

The pound was quoted at USD1.3553 at midday on Tuesday, up from USD1.3534 at the London equities close Monday.

The euro was priced at USD1.1420, down from USD1.1438. Against the Japanese yen, the dollar was trading at JPY115.30, higher than JPY115.05 late Monday in London.

Brent oil was quoted at USD90.78 a barrel on Tuesday at midday, down sharply from USD92.98 at late Monday. Gold stood at USD1,817.83 an ounce, slightly higher against USD1,816.81.

New York was pointed to a subdued start.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was called up 0.2% while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite were both called flat, based on futures trading. The indices had closed flat, down 0.4% and down 0.6% respectively on Monday.

Ahead of the bell, Pfizer reported a jump in net income in the fourth quarter, up to USD3.39 billion from USD847 million a year before. For all of 2021, net income more than doubled to USD21.98 billion from USD9.16 billion.

Home fitness company Peloton reported a net loss of USD439.4 million in its financial second quarter, swung from earnings of USD63.6 million a year before. Peloton said it has been a "humbling time" for the company, as announced a "meaningful reduction" in its workforce to cut annual run-rate costs by USD800 million.

Pfizer was up 1.8% in pre-market trade, while Peloton was down 6.3%, having closed up 21% on Monday amid reports that both Amazon and Nike are considering making offers for the company.

Amgen shares were 0.5% lower in pre-market trade. The drugmaker late Monday said it ended 2021 with a solid profit rise in its final quarter, although this was not enough to lift the overall profit figure against higher costs.

In the three months to December 31, revenue rose 3.2% to USD6.85 billion from USD6.63 billion a year earlier, as a result of the contribution from the Eli Lilly & Co Covid-19 manufacturing collaboration, more than offsetting a 1% drop in product sales. As a result, pretax profit for the quarter climbed 14% to USD2.13 billion from USD1.88 billion.

Thousand Oaks, California-based Amgen reported annual revenue of USD25.98 billion, a 2.2% rise from USD25.42 billion in 2020, due to the Eli Lilly Covid-19 partnership, in spite of flat product sales.

Pretax profit, however, fell 18% to USD6.70 billion from USD8.13 billion, mainly as a result of a USD1.5 billion write-off in required in-process research & development, associated with the group's acquisition of Five Prime Therapeutics, completed in April 2021.

Nvidia was down 1.2% in pre-market after SoftBank confirmed it has terminated its agreement with the Santa Clara, California-based firm to sell UK computer chip maker Arm due to "significant regulatory challenges".

In September 2020, the Jensen Huang-led firm had agreed to buy Arm for USD40 billion. However, the deal faced pressure from US, UK and EU regulators amid fears it would undermine competition as the merger could restrict the access of Nvidia's rivals have to Arm's technology, which is used by firms in making semiconductor chips and other products.

SoftBank said it now plans a public offering of Arm by March 2023.

By Arvind Bhunjun; arvindbhunjun@alliancenews.com

Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

More News
22 Apr 2024 11:52

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Hipgnosis Songs and Tyman jump on takeover talk

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were higher at midday on Monday, as investors eye some key US data as attention turns away from the Middle East for now.

Read more
22 Apr 2024 09:52

Ocado shareholders reportedly pushing for move to NYSE

(Sharecast News) - Ocado shareholders are pushing for a potential shift from its London listing to the New York Stock Exchange, it emerged over the weekend.

Read more
22 Apr 2024 08:49

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Hipgnosis jumps on Blackstone rival offer

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened higher on Monday, as investors shook off nerves ahead of a key US inflation reading later this week.

Read more
22 Apr 2024 07:41

LONDON BRIEFING: Hipgnosis supports Blackstone takeover bid

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London are called to open higher, as investors eye some key FTSE 250 takeovers.

Read more
21 Apr 2024 16:47

Sunday newspaper round-up: IDS, Ocado, Foxtons

(Sharecast News) - Asset manager Redwheel told regulators they should reduce the UK postal service's legal obligations. The move followed a failed buyout attempt by Daniel Kretinsky for International Distributions Services, its parent company. The billionaire investor was said to be evaluating a possible improved bid. The company meanwhile has petitioned Ofcom to let it cut the number of days per week during which it must deliver second-class mail from six to two or three. That would save the company £300m and see it shrink its workforce by 1,000. According to Redwheel, as first reported by the Sunday Times, the enforced costs of its legal obligations left the company "vulnerable to corporate predators". - Guardian

Read more
21 Apr 2024 09:51

PRESS: Ocado facing call to shift listing from London - Telegraph

(Alliance News) - Ocado PLC has faced investor pressure to consider a listing in New York, the Telegraph reported on Saturday.

Read more
10 Apr 2024 16:52

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: New York stocks tumble as US data dashes cut hope

(Alliance News) - European stocks closed off session highs on Wednesday, while equities in New York struggled, after a robust US inflation reading which potentially pushed the first Federal Reserve rate cut of the cycle further into the future.

Read more
10 Apr 2024 11:56

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: European stocks get boost ahead of US inflation

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London were higher at midday on Wednesday, despite some nerves centred around the latest US inflation rate reading, out this afternoon.

Read more
8 Apr 2024 16:52

London close: Stocks rise at start of busy week

(Sharecast News) - London markets closed with gains on Monday as investors exercised caution ahead of key events later in the week.

Read more
5 Apr 2024 17:31

London stocks log weekly declines on geopolitical, rate uncertainty

FTSE 100 down 0.8%, FTSE 250 off 0.7%

*

Read more
5 Apr 2024 15:22

London close: Stocks finish lower as US payrolls top forecasts

(Sharecast News) - London markets closed lower on Friday amid a backdrop of heightened investor caution, following robust US job data for March, hawkish remarks from Federal Reserve officials, and escalating tensions in the Middle East.

Read more
4 Apr 2024 17:04

UK stocks climb on boost from auto, mining stocks after upbeat data

Ocado drops as chairman to step down next year

*

Read more
4 Apr 2024 15:58

London close: Stocks manage gains ahead of US payrolls report

(Sharecast News) - London markets closed higher on Thursday, driven by a robust showing from the mining sector and as investors contemplated the UK services sector's latest figures.

Read more
4 Apr 2024 10:05

TOP NEWS: Ocado chair to step down to focus on NatWest role

(Alliance News) - Ocado Group PLC said on Thursday that its chair intends to step down next year, as "pressure" on his time will grow after taking on the position at lender NatWest Group PLC.

Read more
4 Apr 2024 08:03

Ocado chair Haythornthwaite to step down next year

(Sharecast News) - Ocado said on Thursday that chairman Rick Haythornthwaite will be stepping down next year "due to his increasing commitment" as the recently-appointed chair of NatWest.

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.