Watch LIVE the focusIR May Investor webinar with guest speakers from WS Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksSTOB.L Share News (STOB)

  • There is currently no data for STOB

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

LONDON MARKET OPEN: FTSE Treads Water As Trump Threatens Court Fight

Wed, 04th Nov 2020 08:45

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 was flat early on Wednesday, recovering from a soft open, but European peers were lower, as the knife-edge US presidential race took another dramatic turn when incumbent Donald Trump declared victory and threatened going to the Supreme Court.

In London, the FTSE 100 index was down just 0.18 of a point at 5,786.59. The blue-chip index had fallen by 1.0% to a low of 5,731.07 just after the open.

The FTSE 250 rose 65.07 points, or 0.4%, at 17,556.77. The AIM All-Share was up 4.06 points, 0.4%, at 963.44.

The Cboe UK 100 index was up 0.1% at 575.34. The Cboe 250 was up 0.4% at 14,802.47. The Cboe Small Companies was up 0.1% at 9,509.49.

The CAC 40 stock index in Paris lost 1.0% in early trade on Wednesday, and Frankfurt's DAX 30 was down 1.6%.

"We did win this election," Trump said in an extraordinary speech from the ceremonial East Room of the White House. "This is a fraud on the American public."

The Republican, who according to initial results is in a neck-and-neck race with Democrat Joe Biden with not all states yet called for either side, said he would go to court and "we want all voting to stop".

He appeared to mean stopping the counting of mail-in ballots which can be legally accepted by state election boards after Tuesday's election, provided they were sent in time.

The dollar was higher across the board.

The pound was quoted at USD1.2917 on Wednesday morning, down from USD1.3070 at the London equities close on Tuesday. The euro slipped to USD1.1665, from USD1.1729 late Tuesday. Versus the yen, the dollar fetched JPY105.04, up from JPY104.50 at the London market close on Tuesday.

"The US election has become a mess, and President Trump has made it clear that he is going to go to the Supreme Court. Basically, we are seeing a nightmare situation come true because now we are talking about legal battles. This uncertainty is going to keep traders on edge, especially after Trump has used the word 'fraud'," commented Avatrade analyst Naeem Aslam.

Analysts at Danske Bank noted the result of election is "too close to call this morning".

"The results in Georgia, Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania will be decisive and Biden probably just needs to win two of them to claim the victory."

A candidate needs 270 electoral votes in the Electoral College system to win the White House. Press in the US declared Arizona in Biden's favour, which would push the democrat candidate up to 235 electoral college votes, compared to Trump's 213.

Back in London, Irish paper and packaging firm Smurfit Kappa said its third-quarter performance topped expectations and mid-cap retailer Marks & Spencer Group swung to a loss in a lockdown hit first-half.

Smurfit Kappa said revenue for the nine months to September 30 came in at EUR6.31 billion, down 7.9% from the EUR6.85 billion it reported a year ago. Smurfit shares were 2.4% higher.

Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation were 11% lower at EUR1.13 billion.

"Third-quarter performance was ahead of our expectations," Smurfit said.

Retailer Marks & Spencer's shares added 0.6%. Revenue in the six months ended September 26 dropped 16% year-on-year to GBP4.09 billion, and the high street store chain swung to a pretax loss of GBP87.6 million from a GBP158.8 million profit.

However, the company said the 16% revenue drop outperformed its "Covid-19 planning scenario by 22.8%".

"The Food business has performed strongly despite substantial Covid headwinds during the six-month period achieving 2.7% LFL growth or 6.6% when excluding hospitality, which was largely closed during lockdown," M&S said.

Its more beleaguered Clothing & Home arm "was heavily impacted by the full Covid lockdown in the first quarter, ongoing social distancing and the priority to clear stock". Revenue there dropped 41%.

"Despite the company's historic loss, there are some encouraging signs in Marks & Spencer's update. The initial success of the Ocado partnership is highly promising and appears to be unlocking the food business's previously untapped online potential," said Brewin Dolphin Senior Investment Manager John Moore.

Ocado shares were 1.4% higher.

Elsewhere in London, Stobart Group was down 0.3% after it posted a widened interim loss. The logistics, energy and aviation firm was hit by a reduction in passenger travel at Southend Airport.

Revenue in the six months ended August dropped 29% to GBP53.2 million from GBP74.8 million, and Stobart's pretax loss ballooned to GBP77.4 million from GBP15.5 million.

"Covid-19 has created unprecedented challenges for the group," conceded Chief Executive Warwick Brady.

"Whilst passenger travel has been severely disrupted by lockdowns and evolving quarantine arrangements, London Southend Airport has benefited from uninterrupted income from its global logistics operation. At Stobart Energy, we are seeing a more consistent demand profile and have taken appropriate actions to ensure certainty of supply of waste wood for customers over the winter period to fulfil our valuable long-term supply contracts."

The company affirmed that it "remains focused on exiting Stobart Air", adding that the trading outlook at the unit "has deteriorated significantly" due to Covid-19.

"The group is seeking to exit that business in early course. To that end, it is engaging actively with parties interested in acquiring its stake and with Aer Lingus to enter a new commercial arrangement beyond December 2022 as part of this process," Stobart added.

Elsewhere on the main market, construction firm Morgan Sindall rose 4.5%. The company said annual pretax profit will top its GBP50 million to GBP60 million guidance range.

Morgan Sindall declared a 21.0 pence per share interim payout, in line with 2019's interim dividend.

Commenting on the upcoming lockdown in England, the company said it does not expect any material disruption.

In China, the Shanghai Composite index closed 0.2% higher but the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong lost 0.2%.

The Nikkei 225 in Japan ended the day 1.7% higher. Japan was playing catch up after financial markets reopened following the Culture Day holiday on Tuesday.

In the international economic calendar on Wednesday, there are a slew of services PMI readings due, with Germany, the eurozone, and the UK at 0855 GMT, 0900 GMT and 0930 GMT, respectively. In the afternoon, the US services PMI will be released at 1445 GMT.

A eurozone producer price index print is due at 1000 GMT, followed by the US ADP employment figures at 1315 GMT. This is an important precursor to the nonfarm payrolls data due Friday.

Gold was quoted at USD1,891.62 an ounce early on Wednesday, down from USD1,906.10 late Tuesday.

A barrel of Brent oil fetched USD39.86 early on Wednesday, up from USD39.64.

By Eric Cunha; ericcunha@alliancenews.com;

Copyright 2020 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

More News
17 Jan 2020 07:27

Flybe in talks with govt about loan -BBC

LONDON, Jan 17 (Reuters) - Struggling British regional airline Flybe is in talks with the government about a loan on commercial terms which would not represent a bailout, reported the BBC.Rival airlines British Airways and Ryanair have attacked a...

Read more
16 Jan 2020 15:40

TOP NEWS: Ryanair Calls For Tax Holiday Extension After Flybe Rescue

TOP NEWS: Ryanair Calls For Tax Holiday Extension After Flybe Rescue

Read more
16 Jan 2020 15:32

Ryanair boss joins condemnation of UK bailout of Flybe

LONDON, Jan 16 (Reuters) - The boss of Irish low-cost airline Ryanair has attacked the UK government-backed rescue of regional airline Flybe, joining industry heavyweight Willie Walsh in opposing state help for a private company.Ryanair CEO Michae...

Read more
16 Jan 2020 12:45

Toscafund Ups Stake In Stobart Group To 19% As Ex-Stobart Chief Sells

Toscafund Ups Stake In Stobart Group To 19% As Ex-Stobart Chief Sells

Read more
16 Jan 2020 12:07

UPDATE 2-UK's Stobart invests $12 mln in rescue of airline Flybe

* Stobart is part of consortium that bought Flybe* Flybe rescue backed by UK government earlier this week (Adds background, quote from statement)Jan 16 (Reuters) - Britain's Stobart Group will provide 9 million pounds ($11.8 million) in funding for...

Read more
16 Jan 2020 11:57

Stobart Ready To Inject GBP9 Million Into Rescued Flybe's Coffers

Stobart Ready To Inject GBP9 Million Into Rescued Flybe's Coffers

Read more
15 Jan 2020 14:06

British Airways Owner Lodges Complaint With EU Over Flybe Rescue Deal

British Airways Owner Lodges Complaint With EU Over Flybe Rescue Deal

Read more
15 Jan 2020 09:43

UPDATE 4-UK defends throwing Flybe a lifeline after rivals complain

* IAG files complaint with the EU over Flybe rescue* PM's spokesman says govt help has not broken state aid rules* Details of UK support for Flybe have not been made public* Rival airlines say Flybe's owners should foot the bill (Recasts with PM's ...

Read more
15 Jan 2020 09:43

UPDATE 2-BA owner complains to EU about UK state help for Flybe

* IAG files EU complaint over Flybe rescue* Details of UK support for Flybe have not been made public* Rival airlines say Flybe's owners could foot the bill (Adds details on IAG complaint to EU, background)By Sarah YoungLONDON, Jan 15 (Reuters) - Br...

Read more
15 Jan 2020 09:43

UPDATE 3-BA owner complains to EU about UK state help for Flybe

* IAG files EU complaint over Flybe rescue* Details of UK support for Flybe have not been made public* Rival airlines say Flybe's owners could foot the bill (Adds TV to media identifier)By Sarah YoungLONDON, Jan 15 (Reuters) - British Airways owner ...

Read more
15 Jan 2020 09:43

UPDATE 1-Airlines boss Walsh condemns UK help for Flybe

(Adds background)LONDON, Jan 15 (Reuters) - Willie Walsh, head of the British Airways parent company, has attacked a government-backed rescue of regional UK airline Flybe, calling it a blatant misuse of public funds.Flybe was rescued on Tuesday af...

Read more
15 Jan 2020 08:40

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Muted Start As US And China To Sign Phase One Deal

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Muted Start As US And China To Sign Phase One Deal

Read more
15 Jan 2020 07:35

Former CEO Of Stobart Group Andrew Tinkler Sells Entire 5% Stake

Former CEO Of Stobart Group Andrew Tinkler Sells Entire 5% Stake

Read more
15 Jan 2020 06:50

UPDATE: Flybe Collapse Averted As UK To Review Air Passenger Duty

UPDATE: Flybe Collapse Averted As UK To Review Air Passenger Duty

Read more
14 Jan 2020 18:22

Ministers 'Delighted' As Government Grants Flybe Rescue Deal

Ministers 'Delighted' As Government Grants Flybe Rescue Deal

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.