The latest Investing Matters Podcast episode featuring financial educator and author Jared Dillian has been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksRDSA.L Share News (RDSA)

  • There is currently no data for RDSA

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks Down As Shell To Take USD22 Billion Hit

Tue, 30th Jun 2020 08:48

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened mixed on Tuesday following a strong close on Monday, with Royal Dutch Shell weighing on the FTSE 100 index after warning it will take a big hit from a lower oil & gas prices and narrowed refining margins.

The FTSE 100 was down 15.14 points, or 0.2%, at 6,210.63. The UK's flagship stock index closed up 66.47 points, or 1.1%, at 6,225.77 on Monday.

The mid-cap FTSE 250 index was flat at 17,196.57. The AIM All-Share index was up 0.1% at 884.33.

The Cboe UK 100 index was down 0.4% at 10,501.43. The Cboe 250 was down 0.1% at 14,705.10, and the Cboe Small Companies was up 0.1% at 9,305.59.

In mainland Europe, the CAC 40 in Paris was down 0.1%, while the DAX 30 in Frankfurt was up 0.1%.

On the London Stock Exchange, Smiths Group was the best blue-chip performer, up 4.7% after the engineer announced a strategic restructuring programme to help weather the Covid-19 storm and be "better able to deliver consistent outperformance".

Smiths said the programme is across the group and has an operating cash cost of GBP65 million, which will be spread across financial 2020 and 2021. Savings will substantially offset costs in 2021 and deliver the full annualised benefit of approximatively GBP70 million from 2022 onwards.

Turning to trading, Smiths said in the ten months ended May 31, underlying revenue from Continuing Operations was up 2% and year-to-date revenue increased 6%. For the four months of the second half ended May 31, underlying revenue was up 1%.

Standard Life Aberdeen was up 2.0% after the asset manager said Chief Executive Keith Skeoch is stepping down after five years at the helm. Skeoch is to be replaced by Stephen Bird who will assume the role on Wednesday. Bird is former CEO of global consumer banking at Citigroup, a post from which he retired in November. Bird had been touted as a potential chief executive at HSBC - a role that ultimately went to Noel Quinn.

At the other end of the large-cap index, RELX was the worst performer, down 2.0% after Exane BNP double downgraded the publishing and data analytics firm to Underperform from Outperform.

Royal Dutch Shell 'A' and 'B' shares were down 2.1% and 2.0%, respectively.

The oil major said that a more sombre view on oil and gas prices and refining margins means it will take impairments that will have a pretax impact of USD20 billion to USD27 billion.

The Anglo-Dutch firm is London's largest company by market capitalisation.

Shell said it will take post-tax impairments of USD15 billion to USD22 billion in the second quarter of 2020. It said there will be no cash impact from these impairments.

They stem from Shell's revised view of mid-to-long-term commodity prices and refining margins. Shell said it expects Brent oil to average USD35 a barrel in 2020, rising to USD40 in 2021, USD50 in 2022 and USD60 in 2023. It expects USD60 to be the long-term average.

Similarly, Shell revised down by 30% its expectation for long-term refining margins. Peer BP was down 1.8% in a negative read-across.

Brent oil was quoted at USD41.54 a barrel on Tuesday morning, up slightly from USD41.24 a barrel at the London equities close Monday.

The Japanese Nikkei 225 index closed up 1.3%. In China, the Shanghai Composite ended up 0.7%, while the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong is up 1.0%.

China's factory activity picked up pace in June, official data showed, although analysts warned weak global demand and a potential coronavirus resurgence are weighing on its longer-term recovery.

China's purchasing managers' index, a key gauge of activity in factories, came in at 50.9 points in June, better than the 50.5 forecast in a Bloomberg News poll of analysts and up 0.3 points from May. Anything above 50 indicates expansion. The non-manufacturing PMI came in at 54.4 points, up from 53.6, according to the National Bureau of Statistics.

Meanwhile, China passed a sweeping national security law for Hong Kong, a historic move that critics and many western governments fear will smother the finance hub's freedoms and hollow out its autonomy. The legislation was unanimously approved by China's rubber-stamp parliament on Tuesday morning.

The pound was quoted at USD1.2274 on Tuesday morning, flat from USD1.2271 at the London equities close Monday, after data showed the UK economy recorded its largest fall since 1979.

Figures from the Office for National Statistics showed UK gross domestic product decreased by 1.7% in the first quarter on an annual basis. This was a downward revision of 0.1 percentage points from the previous estimate.

On a quarterly basis, UK GDP shrank by 2.2% in the first three months of 2020, after showing no growth in the previous period and compared with a preliminary estimate of 2.0%. The ONS said this was the largest fall in GDP since the third quarter of 1979 as a coronavirus lockdown from mid-March forced non-essential businesses to close and consumers to stay at home.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is promising a "New Deal" with billions of pounds of investment to ease the UK through the aftermath of the coronavirus pandemic.

The prime minister will use a keynote speech in the West Midlands on Tuesday to say he wants to follow in the footsteps of President Franklin Roosevelt, who led the US out of the Great Depression in the 1930s.

Johnson will say his message is "build, build, build" as the UK comes out of lockdown after the Covid-19 pandemic. The PM will say the government intends to spend GBP5 billion "to accelerate infrastructure projects".

The euro was quoted at USD1.1231, lower from USD1.1243 late Monday in London. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at JPY107.73 in London, flat on JPY107.71.

Gold was priced at USD1,771.88 an ounce, up from USD1,760.70.

In Tuesday's economic calendar, eurozone inflation is due at 1000 BST and US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell testifies before Congress at 1730 BST.

By Arvind Bhunjun; arvindbhunjun@alliancenews.com

Copyright 2020 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

More News
7 Jan 2022 08:17

LONDON BRIEFING: Shell warns on cash outflows but continues buybacks

LONDON BRIEFING: Shell warns on cash outflows but continues buybacks

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:57

LONDON MARKET PRE-OPEN: Shell says buybacks to continue "at pace"

LONDON MARKET PRE-OPEN: Shell says buybacks to continue "at pace"

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:49

Shell to proceed with share buyback 'at pace' despite weaker oil performance

(Sharecast News) - Royal Dutch Shell said its $7bn share buyback programme would continue "at pace" despite weaker oil product sales due to the Omicron Covid variant and forex headwinds in Turkey.

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:27

UPDATE 3-Shell pursues $7 billion buyback 'at pace' despite LNG troubles

* LNG production hit by outages in Australia* Marketing earnings impacted by Omicron slowdown (Adds share price)By Ron BoussoLONDON, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said it will pursue "at pace" a $7 billion share buyback largely funded from t...

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:27

UPDATE 1-Shell to continue $7 bln buyback programme 'at pace'

(Adds detail)By Ron BoussoLONDON, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said on Friday its $7 billion share buyback programme, of which $1.5 billion has been completed, will continue "at pace" despite a slowdown in fuel demand due to the Omicron COV...

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:27

UPDATE 2-Shell pursues $7 billion buyback 'at pace' despite LNG troubles

* LNG production hit by outages in Australia* Marketing earnings impacted by Omicron slowdown (Adds details, graphics)By Ron BoussoLONDON, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said it will pursue its $7 billion share buyback programme after selling ...

Read more
7 Jan 2022 07:10

Shell to continue $7 bln buyback programme 'at pace'

LONDON, Jan 7 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell said on Friday its $7 billion share buyback programme, of which $1.5 billion has been completed, will continue "at pace" despite a slowdown in fuel demand due to the Omicron COVID-19 variant.(Reporting b...

Read more
6 Jan 2022 23:48

U.S. court rejects laundromat owners' bid to block sale of Texas oil refinery to Mexico's Pemex

By Stefanie EschenbacherHOUSTON/MEXICO CITY, Jan 6 (Reuters) - A U.S. court on Thursday tossed out a request from two laundromat owners to block Mexican state oil company Petroleos Mexicanos (Pemex) from acquiring majority control of a Texas oil r...

Read more
6 Jan 2022 12:16

UPDATE 2-Key Kazakh oil fields pump despite protests

(Updates with Shell, details, background)By Ron Bousso and Rowena EdwardsLONDON, Jan 6 (Reuters) - Oil production at Kazakhstan's top three fields is continuing even as some contractors gathered outside the largest Tengiz field in support of protes...

Read more
6 Jan 2022 12:00

Shell-backed U.S. solar developer raises $775 million in equity

By Nichola GroomJan 6 (Reuters) - Silicon Ranch Corp, the U.S. solar project developer backed by Royal Dutch Shell, on Thursday said it raised $775 million in equity capital from new and existing investors.The announcement comes as renewable energ...

Read more
5 Jan 2022 09:54

UPDATE 2-Commodity-linked stocks lift UK's FTSE 100 after dull start

(For a Reuters live blog on U.S., UK and European stock markets, click LIVE/ or type LIVE/ in a news window)* Ocado, LSEG, Ferguson gain as brokerages raise share ratings* Gains in oil majors offset risk-off sentiment* FTSE 100 up 0.2%, FTSE 250 of...

Read more
4 Jan 2022 17:00

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks start 2022 in style as airlines fly higher

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Stocks start 2022 in style as airlines fly higher

Read more
4 Jan 2022 12:04

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Bright start to 2022 as travel stocks take off

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Bright start to 2022 as travel stocks take off

Read more
3 Jan 2022 13:26

U.S. refiner HollyFrontier warns of lower than expected throughput

Jan 3 (Reuters) - U.S. oil refiner HollyFrontier Corp's fourth-quarter throughput will be lower than forecast, hit by weather and turnaround setbacks at refineries in Washington, New Mexico and Oklahoma, the company warned on Monday.Flooding in B...

Read more
31 Dec 2021 13:08

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Muted finish as FTSE 100 rallies 14% in 2021

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: Muted finish as FTSE 100 rallies 14% in 2021

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.