George Frangeskides, Chairman at ALBA, explains why the Pilbara Lithium option ‘was too good to miss’. Watch the video here

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksSGC.L Share News (SGC)

  • There is currently no data for SGC

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

LONDON MARKET OPEN: China data slump sends European stocks lower

Mon, 16th May 2022 09:04

(Alliance News) - Stocks in Europe opened the new trading week with a cloud hanging over them after disappointing economic data from China showed its zero-Covid policy threatens global economic growth.

Victoria Scholar, head of Investment at interactive investor, said: "European markets have opened in the red with travel & leisure and chemicals underperforming while telcos have emerged on top thanks to a near 10% stake purchase of Vodafone by a UAE rival."

The FTSE 100 index was down 20.41 points, or 0.3%, at 7,397.35 early Monday. The mid-cap FTSE 250 index was down 89.36 points, or 0.5%, at 19,832.07. The AIM All-Share index was down 2.53 points, or 0.3%, at 953.07.

The Cboe UK 100 index was down 0.3% at 737.52. The Cboe 250 was down 0.3% at 17,519.76, and the Cboe Small Companies down 0.1% at 14,622.25.

In Paris, the CAC 40 stock index was down 0.8% and the DAX 40 in Frankfurt was 0.6% lower.

ii's Scholar continued: "China's draconian approach to its latest Covid outbreak has really started to weigh heavily on its economy, a critical engine of growth around the world as seen by today's figures. It is raising concerns that the world's [second] largest economy could shrink in the second quarter, potentially paving the way for a recession by the end of Q3 which would have a notable impact on the outlook for global growth."

Industrial production in China fell by 2.9% year-on-year in April, reflecting damage from shuttered factories and transportation woes as officials ramped up Covid restrictions last month. This figure is the weakest since early 2020, and represents a swing from 5.0% growth in March.

The dismal showing came as China battles its worst Covid outbreak since the early days of the pandemic.

The National Bureau of Statistics also announced data showing that retail sales shrank 11% on-year in April. It is the biggest slump since March 2020 as Chinese consumers remained cooped up at home or jittery over lingering restrictions.

AvaTrade analyst Naeem Aslam said: "The data has made traders anxious about the global economic outlook. The general trend is likely to prevail in the market, which is that the dollar index continues to act as a safe haven, Treasuries will soar, and oil prices may move further lower; this shows that this week could be another week of weakness for the global equity markets."

In Asia on Monday, the Japanese Nikkei 225 index closed up 0.5%. In China, the Shanghai Composite ended 0.3% lower, while the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong was up 0.2%. The S&P/ASX 200 in Sydney ended up 0.3%.

Brent oil was quoted at USD110.38 a barrel Monday morning, lower from USD111.00 late Friday. Gold stood at USD1,805.30 an ounce, down significantly against USD1,940.80.

In London, Vodafone was atop the FTSE 100 early Monday, rising 3.6%, after Emirates Telecommunications - which trades as e& and formerly as Etisalat - built a 9.8% stake in the firm, worth GBP3.27 billion at Friday's closing price.

Marc Kimsey, trader at Frederick & Oliver, said: "Demand for Vodafone shares is high this morning. Emirates Telecommunications may have stated it has no intention of making a bid for the whole company, but that won't deter traders from snapping up stock, as UK-listed companies continue to garner interest from foreign entities."

Emirates Telecom said: "e& plans to be a long-term and supportive shareholder in Vodafone and is not seeking to exert control or influence the company's board or management team. Similarly, e& has no intention to make an offer for Vodafone."

Among Lodnon midcaps, Plus500 was up 3.5% - the best performer in the index - after the online trading platform said trading in the second quarter has been "very strong".

As a result, it expects annual earnings and revenue will be "significantly ahead of current market expectations".

In 2021, Plus500 posted pretax profit of USD386.4 million on revenue of USD718.7 million.

"The group's strong performance so far in 2022 has also been driven by the development of new proprietary technologies and product offerings, which will deliver growth and drive expansion and diversification across new geographies," Plus500 added.

At the other end of the FTSE 250, Diploma sunk 7.4%, the worst performer, despite being "delighted" with its performance in the first half, with sales surging.

The London-based specialised technical products and services company said its revenue growth was driven by positive demand and pricing.

In the six months to March 31, revenue was up 23% to GBP448.5 million from GBP365.2 million, and pretax profit up 23% to GBP52.3 million from GBP42.5 million.

Diploma upped its interim dividend by 20% to 15.0 pence from 12.5p.

"We are not complacent about the economic outlook, but the second half has started really well and we are confident in our upgraded full year guidance," Chief Executive Johnny Thomson said.

Diploma is guiding for low double digit underlying revenue growth, and reported revenue growth of a "little over" 20%.

Greggs was down 2.5%. The high-street bakery chain said it has "traded well" in the first 19 weeks of 2022.

Like-for-like sales in company-managed shops surged 27%, a figure which the firm noted is "flattered" by comparison with restricted trading conditions in the same period of 2021.

"Since we last reported, like-for-like sales growth in the most recent ten weeks to 14 May, when lockdowns in 2021 were easing, has averaged 16% and we expect this figure to continue to normalise as we start to compare with more robust trading periods in 2021," Greggs added.

Greggs noted that sales in cities and office locations "continue to lag" but transport locations seen a "marked increase".

Total sales in the 19 weeks to May 14 increased to GBP495 million from GBP378 million.

Kainos shed 6.1% after Berenberg cut the Belfast-headquartered software firm to 'hold' from 'buy'.

National Express gave back 2.4%. It confirmed it will not raise the offer for public transport peer Stagecoach that it made in March.

National Express said it believes its all-share combination with Stagecoach remains the better choice after being spurned for a cash offer from DWS Infrastructure.

In a statement on Monday, National Express said: "The National Express board notes that the proposed exchange ratio represents a current value of 90p per Stagecoach share - based on the latest National Express share price as at May 13 2022 - and an illustrative look-through value of approximately 113p per Stagecoach share, a 7.6% premium to the DWS offer of 105p.

Stagecoach was trading down 0.2% at 104.40p early Monday.

"National Express therefore considers the terms of its proposal to be full and fair and has decided that the terms will not be increased and are now final," National Express said.

The Stagecoach board agreed to a GBP594.9 million cash offer from Pan-European Infrastructure III SCSp, an infrastructure fund managed and advised by DWS Infrastructure.

On Monday, DWS noted it has secured 30.4% acceptances for its takeover, which is unchanged from recent updates.

The pound was quoted at USD1.2247 early Monday, higher from USD1.2230 at the London equities close on Friday.

The euro was priced at USD1.0422, firm against USD1.0410. On Friday, the common currency for the euro area sank to an intraday low of USD1.0350 against the greenback, its lowest level since January 2017.

Against the yen, the dollar was trading at JPY129.23 early Monday in London, soft from JPY129.28 late Friday.

By Paul McGowan; paulmcgowan@alliancenews.com

Copyright 2022 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

More News
7 Dec 2022 10:31

Stagecoach FY revenue, profits rise amid recovery in passenger volumes

(Sharecast News) - Transport firm Stagecoach said on Wednesday that revenues and underlying profits rose in the six months ended 29 October amid a recovery in passenger volumes.

Read more
8 Jul 2022 11:35

Stagecoach Merseyside bus workers to take all-out strike action

(Sharecast News) - Bus workers at Stagecoach Merseyside will take all-out strike action in a dispute over pay, the Unite union has said.

Read more
29 Jun 2022 17:47

IN BRIEF: Stagecoach swings to profit in year before acquisition

Stagecoach Group - formerly bus company Stagecoach Group PLC, now part of DWS Infrastructure following GBP595 million acquisition - For the year ended April 30, revenue grows to GBP1.18 billion from GBP928.2 million year-on-year, as the firm swings to a pretax profit of GBP39.3 million from a pretax loss of GBP5.5 million. Earnings per share 3.2 pence, compared to 0.6 pence. Notes passenger regional bus business passenger volumes are at around 81% of 2019 levels, with commercial sales at 91% of 2019 levels, for the week ended June 18.

Read more
13 Jun 2022 10:00

TOP NEWS: Go-Ahead latest UK transport firm to receive bid interest

(Alliance News) - Go-Ahead Group PLC on Monday said it has received two takeover proposals at terms it "would be minded to recommend" should a firm offer materialise.

Read more
27 May 2022 11:21

Stagecoach to buy Kelsian's east London bus operations for £20m

(Sharecast News) - Stagecoach said on Friday that it has agreed to buy Kelsian Group's east London bus operations and depot at Lea Interchange for £20m.

Read more
27 May 2022 09:37

Stagecoach buys east London bus operations ahead of own takeover

(Alliance News) - Stagecoach Group PLC on Friday said its subsidiary, Stagecoach Bus Holdings Ltd, signed binding agreements to buy east London bus operations from Kelsian Group.

Read more
27 May 2022 07:44

LONDON MARKET PRE-OPEN: Workspace mulls selling former McKay assets

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London are seen opening lower on Friday, failing to follow the lead of a rally in New York overnight, but still on track for a weekly gain.

Read more
26 May 2022 16:02

IN BRIEF: Stagecoach shares to be cancelled by June 27

Stagecoach Group PLC - Perth, Scotland-based transport provider - Says that its shares will be cancelled on June 27. This comes after Inframobility UK Bidco Ltd, a company indirectly wholly-owned Pan-European Infrastructure III SCSp, acquired 82% of the company's share capital.

Read more
26 May 2022 09:40

IN BRIEF: FirstGroup considers takeover offer from I Squared Capital

FirstGroup PLC - Aberdeen, Scotland-based transport provider - Receives "series of unsolicited, conditional proposals" to be acquired by I Squared Capital Advisors (UK) LLP. Says considering latest approach, received Wednesday evening, for 118 pence per share in cash, plus 45.6p more contingent on the proceeds of FirstGroup's recent disposals of First Transit and Greyhound. The 163.60p total offer is a 38% premium to Wednesday's close. Previous approaches all were unanimously rejected by the board, FirstGroup says.

Read more
20 May 2022 18:30

IN BRIEF: Pan-European's bid for Stagecoach becomes unconditional

Stagecoach Group PLC - Perth, Scotland-based transport provider - Pan-European Infrastructure III SCSp, an infrastructure fund managed by DWS Infrastructure, receives acceptances from 363.9 million shares in Stagecoach, reflecting a 66% interest in the company, clearing all conditions for its GBP594.9 million bid and making the offer unconditional.

Read more
16 May 2022 12:15

IN BRIEF: National Express refuses to raise offer for peer Stagecoach

Stagecoach Group PLC - Perth, Scotland-based transport provider - National Express Group PLC confirms it will not raise the takeover offer for public transport peer Stagecoach that it made back in March. National Express says it believes its all-share combination with Stagecoach remains the better deal for Stagecoach shareholders, after being spurned for a cash offer from a fund managed by DWS Infrastructure. National Express notes its offer of a 0.36-times share exchange ratio currently values each Stagecoach share at 90 pence, which is below the DWS offer of 105p in cash. However, when including synergies, this rises to about 113p, a 7.6% premium. "National Express therefore considers the terms of its proposal to be full and fair and has decided that the terms will not be increased and are now final," it says.

Read more
16 May 2022 07:52

LONDON MARKET PRE-OPEN: Ryanair loss narrows; Plus500 trading strong

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 looks set to start the new trading week on the back foot, following less than stellar data in China on Monday that showed the fallout from the country's zero-Covid policy.

Read more
5 May 2022 13:15

UPDATE: DWS fund lowers acceptance condition for Stagecoach offer

Stagecoach Group PLC - Perth, Scotland-based transport provider - Bidder lowers the acceptance condition for its agreed takeover offer to 50% from 75%. Pan-European Infrastructure III SCSp, an infrastructure fund managed by DWS Infrastructure, has acceptances for its offer representing 30% of Stagecoach shares, unchanged from recent announcements. DWS decided to reduce the acceptance condition in order to provide more certainty to Stagecoach shareholders, as the deal is more likely to complete as a result, a spokesperson explains.

Read more
5 May 2022 11:51

IN BRIEF: DWS fund lowers acceptance condition for Stagecoach offer

Stagecoach Group PLC - Perth, Scotland-based transport provider - Bidder lowers the acceptance condition for its agreed takeover offer to 50% from 75%. Pan-European Infrastructure III SCSp, an infrastructure fund managed by DWS Infrastructure, gives no reason for the decision. It says it has acceptances for its offer representing 27.5% of Stagecoach shares, essentially unchanged from recent announcements.

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.