Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksSmiths Group Share News (SMIN)

Share Price Information for Smiths Group (SMIN)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 1,722.00
Bid: 1,721.00
Ask: 1,723.00
Change: 3.00 (0.17%)
Spread: 2.00 (0.116%)
Open: 1,722.00
High: 1,726.00
Low: 1,716.00
Prev. Close: 1,719.00
SMIN 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: Stocks slide as investors nervously look to ECB

Wed, 08th Sep 2021 17:12

(Alliance News) - Stocks in London ended lower on Wednesday with housebuilders weighing on the FTSE 100 as investors look cautiously ahead to Thursday's European Central Bank meeting.

The FTSE 100 index closed down 53.84 points, 0.8%, at 7,095.53. The mid-cap FTSE 250 index closed down 248.59 points, 1.0%, at 23,848.89. The AIM All-Share index ended down 6.89 points, 0.5%, at 1,300.66.

The Cboe UK 100 index was down 0.7% at 706.30 The Cboe 250 was down 1.2% at 21,617.10, and the Cboe Small Companies was down 0.6% at 15,499.00.

In Paris the CAC 40 ended 0.9% lower, while the DAX 30 in Frankfurt ended down 1.5%.

CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson said: "It's been a uniformly negative day for European stocks, as concerns over slowing economic activity weigh on sentiment against a backdrop of rising prices and chatter that central banks are looking at paring back the amount of stimulus in the weeks and months ahead.

"Tomorrow's European Central Bank rate meeting could well be an interesting affair given comments released earlier today from Austrian governing council member Robert Holzmann who warned that the central bank might normalise policy sooner than markets expect."

In the FTSE 100, B&M European Value Retail ended the best performer, up 6.9%. The variety retailer raised annual guidance on stronger than expected margins.

B&M said it now expects adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation for the first half period to September 25 to be between GBP275 million and GBP285 million. The market expectation is currently around GBP235 million.

Revenue for the year to date has been broadly in line with market expectations, while gross margins have been stronger than originally anticipated in the B&M UK fascia business, the company noted.

Smiths Group closed up 2.6% after the engineer backed a higher offer to sell its Smiths Medical unit to California-based medical technology firm ICU Medical.

The terms of the deal are "superior" to a USD2.3 billion sale it agreed with private equity firm TA Associates. The company had agreed the TA deal in August, though it has now withdrawn its recommendation for that offer.

The ICU Medical deal values Smiths Medical at USD2.7 billion, with a further USD100 million up for grabs depending on Nasdaq-listed ICU's share price performance following the acquisition.

Minus debt and other liabilities, the deal is worth USD2.4 billion, about USD400 million higher than the TA agreement. In addition, Smiths will also receive 2.5 million ICU shares, worth USD500 million at current market prices.

Smiths plans to return 55% of the sales proceeds, equal to GBP737 million, to shareholders through a buyback.

"UK stocks are reflecting some concerns about economic growth this afternoon too, as the market frets that the rise in National Insurance will hit consumer spending, and activity in areas like the housing market. Housebuilders, banks and REITs are sitting at the bottom of the FTSE 100, although the declines are more contained than those on the continent, where indices have fallen much further into the red," said IG's Chris Beauchamp.

Large-cap housebuilders Persimmon, Taylor Wimpey, Barratt Developments and Berkeley ended the worst performers, down 4.0%, 3.8%, 3.4% and 2.8%, respectively.

In the FTSE 250, Dunelm Group ended the star performer, up 13%, after the home furnishings retailer reported rapid growth in online sales and rising demand from customers turning to home improvement during lockdowns led to buoyant annual results.

Dunelm posted a pretax profit of GBP157.8 million for the year ended June 26, jumping from GBP109.1 million the previous year.

Dunelm declared a special payout of 65.0 pence to cap off a bumper year for the FTSE 250 firm, which benefitted from increased demand as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. A full-year ordinary dividend of 35.0p per share was also declared, having not paid one a year earlier.

The pound was quoted at USD1.3745 at the London equities close, down from USD1.3780 at the close Tuesday, in the wake of the UK government's plan for a tax hike to pay for NHS and social care spending.

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson will attempt to convince Conservative MPs to back his plan to fix social care on Wednesday at a snap House of Commons vote called just one day after the manifesto-busting new policy was announced.

Johnson took a political gamble on Tuesday after he reneged on an election pledge not to raise three of the main UK taxes. The PM outlined plans to hike national insurance contributions to deal with the backlog in the NHS built up during Covid and to deliver long-overdue reform of the social care system in England.

Tory opposition to the plans when first leaked was fierce, but any backbench rebellion appeared to have subsided by Tuesday as MPs provided little challenge to the PM as he presented his proposals to the Commons.

But the plan - along with another manifesto-breaking announcement to temporarily suspend the "triple lock" on pensions - moves Johnson away from his traditional position of low-tax Conservatism.

In addition, Johnson refused to give a firm commitment that taxes would not go up again - although he said he did not want that to happen.

The government's plan will see the introduction of a new health and social care levy, based on a 1.25 percentage-point increase in national insurance contributions - breaking a Tory commitment not to raise NI, income tax or value added tax.

As such, analysts at Pantheon Economics believe the UK government's decision to raise taxes will defer a full recovery in households' spending to the second half of next year.

Patheon's Samuel Tombs explained: "The government's plan to hike the rate of national insurance paid by employees by 1.25 percentage points in April, to cap social care costs for the elderly, is significant enough to slow the economic recovery next year. NICs are calculated on earnings above GBP120 per week, or GBP6,200 a year. As a result, the average worker, who was paid GBP25,800 last year, will see their NICs bill rise by GBP244, reducing take-home pay by 1.2%.

"This hit won't be easily absorbed by households, given that the effective rate of income tax will be rising at the same time, due to the Chancellor's decision in the Budget to freeze the thresholds for the basic and higher rates at current levels for four years."

The euro stood at USD1.1815 at the European equities close, down from USD1.1840 late Tuesday, ahead of the European Central Bank's interest rate decision on Thursday.

The ECB Governing Council meets in Frankfurt, announcing its latest policy decision at 1345 CET on Thursday. This will be followed by a press conference with President Christine Lagarde at 1430 CET.

The taper debate will continue to dominate focus at this week's ECB meeting, but policy-makers are expected to monitor the backdrop for a few more months before taking action.

At the most recent meeting, which took place in July, the Frankfurt-based central bank for the eurozone kept the interest rate on the main refinancing operations and the interest rates on the marginal lending facility and the deposit facility unchanged at 0.00%, 0.25% and negative 0.50%, respectively.

ING said the latest ECB meeting looks set to be a featureless affair, saying "any changes to the communication and policy stance look unlikely."

Against the yen, the dollar was trading at JPY110.40, up from JPY110.20 late Tuesday.

Stocks in New York were lower at the London equities close as investors weigh the latest Covid-19 trends and concerns about shifting monetary policy.

The DJIA was down 0.2%, the S&P 500 index down 0.3% and the Nasdaq Composite down 0.8%.

Stocks have been under pressure since last Friday when a weak US jobs report exacerbated fears that the Delta variant of Covid-19 could slow or derail the recovery.

Brent oil was quoted at USD72.35 a barrel at the equities close, up sharply from USD71.67 at the close Tuesday.

Gold was quoted at USD1,791.85 an ounce at the London equities close, marginally lower against USD1,794.50 late Tuesday.

The economic events calendar on Thursday has China inflation readings overnight, Germany trade data at 0700 BST and the latest US jobless claims numbers at 1330 BST.

The UK corporate calendar on Thursday has interim results from IT services provider Computacenter, private healthcare firm Spire Healthcare and supermarket chain Wm Morrison Supermarkets.

By Arvind Bhunjun; arvindbhunjun@alliancenews.com

Copyright 2021 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

More News
26 Mar 2021 17:03

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 adds 65 points on economic recovery hope

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 adds 65 points on economic recovery hope

Read more
26 Mar 2021 12:13

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Stocks rise; Fed lifts payout curb on US banks

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Stocks rise; Fed lifts payout curb on US banks

Read more
26 Mar 2021 09:28

UPDATE 2-FTSE 100 logs strongest day in over two weeks on commodity-linked boost

(For a Reuters live blog on U.S., UK and European stock markets, click LIVE/ or type LIVE/ in a news window)* Miners biggest gainers on FTSE 100* UK retail sales rise 2.1% in February* Smiths Group tops index on upbeat forecast* Both FTSE 100 and FT...

Read more
26 Mar 2021 09:11

TOP NEWS: Smiths Group pleased with robust first-half performance

TOP NEWS: Smiths Group pleased with robust first-half performance

Read more
26 Mar 2021 08:49

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Smiths Group surges after raising dividend

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Smiths Group surges after raising dividend

Read more
26 Mar 2021 07:48

LONDON MARKET PRE-OPEN: Smiths lifts dividend; Aviva sells in Poland

LONDON MARKET PRE-OPEN: Smiths lifts dividend; Aviva sells in Poland

Read more
26 Mar 2021 07:02

Smiths ups dividend after first-half profit drops

(Sharecast News) - Smiths Group increased its interim dividend and said it was confident about meeting expectations for annual results after profit fell in the first half.

Read more
19 Mar 2021 16:03

UK earnings, trading statements calendar - next 7 days

UK earnings, trading statements calendar - next 7 days

Read more
3 Mar 2021 11:56

LIVE MARKETS-Buy EU value, hold U.S. growth

* European shares rise 0.5%* Autos help lift DAX to all-time high* Eyes on final PMIs, UK budget* Wall Street futures riseMarch 3 - Welcome to the home for real-time coverage of markets brought to you by Reuters reporters. You can share your though...

Read more
1 Feb 2021 13:44

Monday broker round-up

(Sharecast News) - Polymetal International: Berenberg reiterates buy with a target price of 2,310p.

Read more
1 Feb 2021 09:44

BROKER RATINGS: UBS Downgrades Pearson To Sell; Liberum Cuts Marston's

BROKER RATINGS: UBS Downgrades Pearson To Sell; Liberum Cuts Marston's

Read more
18 Jan 2021 09:34

UK BROKER RATINGS SUMMARY: Land Securities And Dixons Get Upgrades

UK BROKER RATINGS SUMMARY: Land Securities And Dixons Get Upgrades

Read more
17 Dec 2020 09:48

UK BROKER RATINGS SUMMARY: BofA Rates Rotork Buy, Weir Underperform

UK BROKER RATINGS SUMMARY: BofA Rates Rotork Buy, Weir Underperform

Read more
16 Dec 2020 09:28

UK BROKER RATINGS SUMMARY: Credit Suisse Downgrades John Wood

UK BROKER RATINGS SUMMARY: Credit Suisse Downgrades John Wood

Read more
16 Nov 2020 11:56

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Momentum Continues On Vaccine Hopes, Upbeat Data

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: Momentum Continues On Vaccine Hopes, Upbeat Data

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.