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Stock market bears start to argue the Goldilocks economy is running too hot
AJ Bell's response to the FCA's Proposed changes for illiquid funds
UK fund managers suffer £10bn outflows since Brexit
Second bid for INTU may stoke fresh interest in beaten down property stocks
Why the US bond sell-off might matter to UK investors
Thai troubles take some off the gloss away from Tesco’s UK turnaround
US housing market may hold key to Ferguson’s fortunes as firm releases bumper profits and dividends
Credit card debt soars after summer of fun – AJ Bell comment
James Halstead polishes its reputation with yet another dividend increase
Goldman Sachs launches new UK bank with market-leading rate – AJ Bell comment
Sunshine helps Next but retailer’s online expertise is the real ray of light
Three takeaways from the Barrick-Randgold deal: gold price signals, FTSE 100 M&A boom and CEO longevity
Bulls of Japanese stocks breathe a sigh of relief as Abe wins party leadership vote
Short-sellers start nibbling away at Ocado again even as firm delivers solid trading update
Will US sector index changes trouble technology stocks or nail Netflix?
Morrison stays on track as McColl’s link-up adds to recovery’s momentum
Why US household net worth tells us there will be another markets crash
The IFS has today released a report looking at the ongoing impact of the 2008 Financial Crisis.
SSE blows a fuse (but does that mean this is now a good time for investors to plug in?)
St. Leger day rule suggests FTSE All-Share could stumble to a sticky end in 2018
One month after THAT tweet and Tesla’s shares and bonds are firmly in reverse gear
No changes to the FTSE 100 in latest reshuffle but energy, gaming and financial stocks make progress lower down the ranks
Investors flee equities, North America hit hardest, property funds back in favour
Utilities rally as Ofgem review proves no worse than feared
FTSE 100’s winners and losers in August 2018
Big spending summer continues, but Brits plan cutbacks
Even a huge dividend increase fails to rev up Redrow’s shares
Smithson Investment Trust IPO – AJ Bell reaction
Savers stash more cash in ISAs; 166,000 use new Lifetime ISA
Sage shift is the sixteenth announced change in FTSE 100 chief executive this year (the second most since 2000)
Whitbread sale of Costa begs the question of who will be next on the activists’ hit-list?
Why next week’s US wage growth numbers may be even more important than usual
Aston Martin looks to join list of luxury goods winners with planned flotation
As a new cash Lifetime ISA is launched, which is better - the Help to Buy Isa or LISA?
Following the launch of a new cash Lifeftime ISA by Nottingham Building Society, AJ Bell looks at whether the Help to Buy ISA or Lifetime ISA is better for different customers.
As a new cash Lifetime ISA is launched, which is better - the Help to Buy Isa or LISA?
Following the launch of a new cash Lifetime ISA by Nottingham Building Society, AJ Bell looks at whether the Help to Buy ISA or Lifetime ISA is better for different customers.
The ultimate income investment trusts
French woes weigh on Kingfisher
“Kingfisher’s Turkish joint-venture Koçtaş is a very, very small part of the DIY giant – it contributed just £3 million in profit last year in combination with a 49%-owned French operation – so investors don’t need to worry too much about that, but slack sales at the core Carrefour brand in France is a bigger concern altogether,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell’s Investment Director.
Inflation clobbers rail commuters and cash savers
House of Fraser fighting to avoid becoming fourth founder member of FTSE 100 to go bust
“Three founder members of the FTSE 100 in 1984 went broke and it is to be hoped that House of Fraser – a private company since 2006 – does not become a fourth, not least for the sake of the company’s staff and suppliers,” says Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
Turkey teaches new generation of investors some old (and painful) lessons
“The collapse of the Turkish lira and the threat of contagion across emerging and also developed stock and bond markets look to be catching many investors off guard but this is just an another example of what the economist J.K. Galbraith once termed ‘the extreme brevity of financial memory, because we have been here before,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Lifetime ISA investors plump for passives and cash-in on top-performing funds
Derwent London maintains stunning dividend growth record as it readies for Crossrail to start rolling
“The Real Estate Investment Trust (REITs) sector has struggled this year, falling slightly while the FTSE All-Share has eked out a 1% gain, and today’s interim results from Derwent London offer enough to keep both bulls and bears of the British property stocks more than interested,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Short-sellers in Tesla get burned again as Musk floats plan to take firm private
“A very experienced – and successful – hedge fund manager once told me that he never shorted high-flying, popular stocks until they had at least halved, because that was when confidence would finally begin to crack and shareholders would start to sell on the rallies and not buy on the dips. The latest action in Tesla’s share price reinforces the wisdom of these words,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Big Five FTSE 100 banks record biggest combined profit since start of 2013
“Helped by the long-awaited drop in conduct and litigation costs, loan and asset write-downs and restructuring charges, the Big Five FTSE 100 banks racked up a stated pre-tax profit of £9.3 billion in the second quarter of 2018, their best three-month showing since the £10 billion total racked up between January to March 2013,” says Russ Mould AJ Bell Investment Director.
John Laing deal may trigger more infrastructure investment trust bids
“Management’s decision to recommend a cash offer for the John Laing Infrastructure fund from a consortium of financial buyers could well trigger more bids for the remaining London-quoted investment trusts in the infrastructure area for three reasons,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Rising cash pile at Berkshire Hathaway shows what Buffett thinks of current stock market valuations
“Yet another increase in the total cash pile at his Berkshire Hathaway, to $129.6 billion, despite $12 billion in net new investments in traded securities in the second quarter (mainly Apple), suggests that master investor Warren Buffett is still having difficulty in finding value in US – and perhaps global – stocks,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
RBS declares first-half dividend after fifth profit in six quarters
“RBS boss Ross McEwan had identified three major obstacles to the bank’s long-awaited return to the dividend list. He has now satisfied European state-aid regulators regarding the Williams & Glyn subsidiary, settled with the US Federal Housing Agency and in principle reached a $4.9 billion settlement with the US Department of Justice, so all three of those boxes are ticked,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Investors turn their backs of fixed income funds in June
Tesla’s bond price suggests shareholders need to keep their seat belts firmly on
“The substantial jump in Tesla’s shares in after-hours trading in the US could lead you to believe that the car maker is firmly back on track after a torrid few months of production problems, a plunging share price and public relations gaffes from its boss, but a more muted reaction from the company’s traded bonds shows that there is still much work to be done,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Rate hike will focus investors’ attention on banks, retailers and utilities
“If stock market investors want a guide as to what they need to know about the Bank of England’s second rate hike in ten years, then they should take a look at the UK Government bond – or Gilt – market,” says Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
BoE reloads the interest rate gun ahead of Brexit
Apple’s valuation nears the $1 trillion mark – but is that such a good thing?
“Apple’s third-quarter earnings easily beat analysts’ forecasts, as sales rose 17% and earnings per share soared by 40%, as price increases on its hardware and flourishing services and app store revenues more than compensated for sluggish volume growth in iPhones, iPads and iMacs,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Drop in costs drives profit forecast upgrade and dividend increase at Lloyds
“The first-half results show the way forward for Lloyds and its shareholders. The combined cost of bad loans, PPI compensation and restructuring costs fell by £539 million compared to the first six months of 2017 and pre-tax profit rose by £573 million. It’s that simple,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Cash flow finally starts to gush at BP but concerns over BHP deal overshadow dividend increase
“Gone are the days when BP was offering a dividend yield of 7% to 8% and that is actually a good thing, because it means investors are no longer demanding such a high return to compensate themselves for the risks associated with holding the shares,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Treasury Committee report on household savings - AJ Bell comment
The Treasury Committee has published its report on Household finances: income, saving and debt.
UK households face £25 billion black hole as spending exceeds income for the first time in 30 years
House prices are increasingly out of reach for first time buyers
RPC’s roll-up plan runs into difficulties
“Roll-up strategies, where a series of acquisitions are used to create growth (or at least the impression of it) tend to work very well – until they don’t, and that is what serial plastic packaging company purchaser RPC now seems to be finding out the hard way,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
The 'Dividend Hero' stocks offering a 48% yield
Subscriber growth slowdown spooks Netflix shareholders but cash flow and valuation are the real issues
“Investors in Netflix are suffering a rare reverse today as the shares are tumbling amid disappointment over the company’s subscriber addition number for the second quarter of the year. But nerves over the subs figure relay reflect the company’s lofty valuation and how the company is still a long way from generating the sort of cash flow that would justify its $155 billion market capitalisation,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
FCA Platforms Market Study interim report - AJ Bell comment
The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has today published the interim findings of its platforms market study.
What could trigger a sterling crisis and what could investors expect as a result?
“Sterling has suffered three crises of confidence since 1945, so a repeat cannot be entirely ruled out owing to the current political upheaval and lack of clarity on Brexit, although previous notable plunges have been the result of economic problems rather than any games of musical chairs at Westminster,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell investment director.
Superyachts, hot weather and high valuations show it’s tough being a retailer (even a really successful one)
“It’s not as if much further evidence was needed, but today shows just how tough it is to be a retailer in the current environment of low wage growth, high debts and brittle consumer confidence,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell investment director.
Housebuilders keep subsiding despite strong numbers from Barratt
“Shares in house builder Barratt are trading at their lowest level since January 2017 despite a reassuring full-year trading update, which shows further price increases, better-than-expected profit and a higher-than-forecast net cash pile, all of which support the company’s plans to pay meaty dividends to shareholders,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
World cup fever and hot weather boosts consumer spending 5.1%
Stock market trends suggest investors are getting nervous
Graduates stung for £50 million they didn’t owe on student loans
Graduates have paid off £50 million in student loans that they didn’t owe in just one year
£1.2 billion flowed out of UK Equity funds in May
Great Portland update fails to dispel fears over UK property market
“The company may be Great Portland by name but its first-quarter update was neither good nor bad and as such will do nothing to change the views of those investors who feel that UK real estate stocks now look cheap or those who think that Brexit and the ongoing hollowing out of the High Street means the asset class is a disaster waiting to happen,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
The Financial Power of Women – AJ Bell comment
The Financial Power of Women report released today by Fidelity International shows that women face a lower retirement income than men.
The Financial Power of Women – AJ Bell comment
The Financial Power of Women report released today by Fidelity International shows that women face a lower retirement income than men.
Will soggy consumer confidence start to chip away at the housing market?
“The latest GfK survey on UK consumer confidence shows a fresh decline to -9 in June and leaves us without a score above zero since January 2016. This may help to explain the woes of many retailers but perhaps executives at (and shareholders in) the house builders need to start paying attention to this data too,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
US bull-run closing in on post war record – can it continue?
The share bull market in the US has currently run for 3,399 days – just 53 days shy of the longest bull-run since the second world war of 3,452 days which ran between October 1990 and March 2000.
Signs of recovery could persuade predators to get ready for some Hunting
“General Electric announced the merger of its oil and gas operations with Baker Hughes in October 2016, when times were tough for oil services and equipment providers, and closed the transaction in July 2017, right near the sector’s lows. There now has to be a risk that it will undo that deal just as trading conditions start to improve, judging by today’s trading statements from FTSE 250 firms Hunting and Wood Group,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Savers keeping options open for cash savings
Seven Lifetime ISA quirks that are catching investors out
The Lifetime ISA is a valuable new option for people saving for a house deposit or retirement but there are some complications in the rules that are catching investors out.
FANG+ index is on track to outpace NASDAQ’s bubbly gains of 1999 (and we all know how that ended …..)
“After a stumble in spring, amid the Cambridge Analytica data scandal and broader worries over regulation, trade and tariffs, technology stocks are surging higher once more. The Fang+ index in America, which consists of ten high-flyers in total, has just passed the 3,000 level for the first time. It took the benchmark just 1,365 days to get there after its launch at 1,000 in autumn 2014. By contrast it took the NASDAQ Composite 1,570 days to get from 1,000 to 3,000 between July 1995 and November 1999,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Bank of England’s inactivity suggests policy makers are unconvinced by growth outlook (rather like the bond market)
“A vote of 6 - 3 to leave interest rates unchanged at 0.5% and Quantitative Easing (QE) unchanged at £445 billion suggests that the Bank of England is closer to the European Central Bank rather than the more aggressive US Federal Reserve in its outlook, with any tightening of monetary policy likely to come slowly and in modest steps,” says AJ Bell Investment Director Russ Mould.
Repeat of peak profits forecast shakes shares in Berkeley
“Second-guessing Tony Pidgley, chairman of Berkeley Homes, is usually unwise and investors appear to be taking his forecast that profits have peaked at the house builder more seriously today than when he first made it back in December,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
FCA study shows lack of savings and lack of trust in financial services
The FCA today released its Financial Lives survey of UK consumers’ attitudes to financial products.
How investors can (just) make money tracking FTSE 100 relegations and promotions
“The latest promotions to – and relegations from – the FTSE 100 index come into effect today and investors will be intrigued to see how shares in both relegated firms are down in early trading. G4S is down 3% and Mediclinic down 1%. A glance at the promoted firms will show that GVC is up 1% to perhaps suggest there is a trading strategy that could be followed here, although a 3% fall in the other index entrant, Ocado, suggests that there isn’t such easy money to be found after all,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Weak pound and rising oil price stoke inflation
Tesco keeps the tills ringing as Booker boosts sales momentum
“Sainsbury’s chief executive Mike Coupe may have been caught singing ‘We’re in the Money’ when his guard was temporarily down but Tesco boss Dave Lewis must be feeling equally pleased with himself after the first-quarter sales figures,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Seventh rate hike from Fed sets stock market investors their latest challenge
“The US Federal Reserve’s determination to continue tightening monetary policy, via both higher interest rates and sterilisation of Quantitative Easing, is likely to make life more difficult for investors, if history is any guide, even if financial markets are largely still behaving as if improved returns on cash and increased borrowing costs poses little or no threat,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
OPEC meeting preview: sectors and stocks that could benefit if oil weakens further (or struggle if it goes higher again)
“To the surprise of many, OPEC and Russia have stuck to the production cuts of 1.8 million barrels a day that they agreed upon in December 2016, even extending them to the end of this year, but all eyes are now on the oil cartel’s latest meeting in Vienna on 22 June, to see if Riyadh and Moscow in particular decide to stay with the status quo or start to nudge output higher,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Halma shows how it is done with thirty-ninth consecutive dividend increase
“It might not be a household name although a record of 39 consecutive increases of more than 5% in Halma’s annual dividend suggests that it should be, especially as this track record means the FTSE 100 firm is a good example of how a company that gets the basics right can reward patient investors,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
FTSE in positive mood, Rolls-Royce’s engine trouble and BCA driven up by bid interest
“Investors don’t appear to be overly worried about the latest state of affairs with international trade following the G7 meeting, given that markets in Asia and Europe move ahead on Monday. In the UK, the FTSE 100 moved up 0.5% in early trading to 7,718, helped by gains in utility, tobacco and financial stocks,” says Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
BT and its boss part ways as the Patterson plan fails to deliver
“At least the BT share price showed some mercy as it failed to bounce sharply upon the announcement that chief executive Gavin Patterson will step down later this year, but investors and the company’s board have finally decided it is time for new leadership,” says AJ Bell Investment Director Russ Mould.
Outflows from UK equity funds since Brexit vote approaching £8bn – new IA figures
NAO hands out further criticism of Government – but ultimately Carillion was a failure of management
“Today it is the turn of the National Audit Office to unpick and quantify the cost of the Carillion debacle,” says AJ Bell Investment Director Russ Mould. “The NAO hands out further criticism of the Government’s efforts to monitor the financial health of central government’s sixth biggest supplier by value, suggesting it did too little too late to properly monitor the risk posed by its reliance on Carillion and make appropriate contingency plans.”
RPC shares roll over as cash flow and quality concerns come home to roost
“So much for claims last July from RPC’s chief executive officer, Pim Vervaat, that the plastics packaging specialist’s share price ‘significantly undervalues the performance to date and the Group’s future prospects,’ says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Chancellor Hammond starts to reduce State exposure to the incredible shrinking bank
“George Osborne received all sorts of criticism when he sold a 6% stake in Royal Bank of Scotland at 330p a share, for a £1 billion loss, back in 2015, so his successor Philip Hammond was always going to get a hard time if he sold any further Government holdings at less than the taxpayer’s 502p purchase price. Patriots may also be disappointed to note that the four lead investment banks who co-managed the deal were all American, although RBS may not have been too keen to work with direct local competitors such as HSBC and Barclays anyway,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Dixons Carphone troubles spark MPs' questions over dividends/deficit repayments balance
Influential Work and Pensions Committee chairman Frank Field MP has written to the trustees of the Dixons Retirement and Employee Security Scheme – the defined benefit scheme of Dixons Carphone – raising the issue of the balance struck between paying dividends and deficit repayments.
Index reshuffle looks set to deliver Ocado to the FTSE 100
“The latest quarterly reshuffle of the FTSE 100 index is due to be calculated on the basis of closing market valuations on Tuesday 29 May and at the moment Ocado is poised to break into the UK’s corporate elite at the expense of support services firm G4S,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
The slide in inflation could be short lived
Fat dividend yield may tempt M&S investors to wait patiently at the check-out (at least for now)
“A sharp jump in Marks & Spencer’s shares this morning means that the retailer got its news management right, by releasing the details of big store closures ahead of its results, but the numbers themselves are nothing to be proud of and show just how much work there is still to be done,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Three reasons why the FTSE 100 could keep on running (and three why it might not)
“The FTSE 100 continues to overcome investors’ concerns over the Brexit negotiations, a wobbly Government, indecisive central bank and modest UK economic growth as it reaches further new highs. There are three good reasons why the index could keep going, too, and launch a fresh assault on the 8,000 mark – although investors also need to be aware of the potential downside and what could still go wrong,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Ryanair among worst-performing airline stocks over past 12 months
“Investors appear to be taking today’s very cautious trading outlook from Ryanair in their stride, as the airline’s shares are gaining altitude in early trading. This may be a reflection of the company management’s long-term track record of getting it right and providing customers with what they want, hopes that the spat with the unions is over and that further consolidation in the airline business will help keep supply and demand in balance,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.
Four factors powering the FTSE 100 to record highs
Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, looks at four factors that have helped power the FTSE 100 to record highs:
Short-sellers get carried out again as Ocado strikes latest partnership deal
“Ocado’s fourth overseas technology partnership, with American grocery giant Kroger, is potentially the biggest of them all so far and this means more pain for the short-sellers who continue to question the lofty valuation attributed to the FTSE 250 firm’s shares,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell Investment Director.