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No news is good news as Next sticks to forecasts and dividend payment plan
The delivery of a first-half trading update that was simply no worse than expected is proving enough to take Next to the top of the FTSE 100 this morning, helped by confirmation of the retailer’s special dividend plan and a rally in the pound, as well as the absence of any further profit warning. This is not to say the results were pretty.
Home comforts carry HSBC higher
Shares in megabank HSBC are trading at post-financial-crisis highs, helped by a set of solid interims, an unchanged dividend and a new $2 billion share buyback scheme as the lender makes the most of buoyant conditions in Asia.
SEGRO looks to cement its position in FTSE 100 with strong interims
Intu’s departure from the FTSE 100 last month suggests that investors are starting to fret about how the switch to online shopping could hit the value of retail properties but strong interim results from warehouse owner SEGRO, which took Intu’s place among the UK’s corporate elite, show who is benefitting from the surge in shopping from home.
Reckitt pulls out all the stops to reassure after poor second quarter
Health-to-hygiene group Reckitt Benckiser’s interims will soothe fans of the stock but may not fully persuade the sceptics that its growth prospects justify the company’s lofty valuation, especially as life-for-like sales progress remains limited and adjusted earnings figures put a flattering gloss on the first half.
Reassuring Chinese GDP growth gives markets one less thing to worry about (for now)
The West would be ecstatic if its economies were to suddenly start growing by nearly 7% a year but the second-quarter increase of 6.9% generated by China is the norm for the Middle Kingdom and this figure should help to reassure those who are worried that Beijing’s gathering debt mountain mean it could one day suffer a hard landing.
Value-seekers yet to embrace Babcock
“Even though they are trading near four-year lows, shares in Babcock are receiving little love from investors this morning, even as the support services giant offers some reassurance on its order backlog in a brief first-quarter trading update,” says AJ Bell Investment Director Russ Mould.
Bumper numbers from Barratt even as housing sales only inch higher
Shareholders will be delighted by today’s upbeat trading statement from Barratt Developments as the FTSE 100 firm unveils better-than-expected pre-tax profits, but very modest growth in actual housing completions will be less welcome with those struggling to get onto the property ladder (and possibly the Government) as prices creep ever higher.
Carillion share price collapse delights hedge funds
A profit and dividend catastrophe at Carillion, which is also prompting chief executive Richard Howson to step down after five-and-a-half years at the helm, offers useful lessons to private investors, besides a killing to some shrewd professional ones.
M&S is still in a JAM (just about managing)
An early 2% fall puts M&S in amongst the worst five performers in the FTSE 100, taking the shares back to where they were in April (and still way below the 400p-a-share bid offered by Sir Philip Green, all the way back in 2004).
Snap shares go below their flotation price to give its investors the summertime blues
A closing overnight price of $16.99 means shares in Snap are now trading below their $17 flotation price, as technology stocks’ valuations come under fresh scrutiny.
House builders shake off Brexit wobble
Encouraging trading updates from nationwide house builder Persimmon and Northern-focused builder and urban regeneration expert MJ Gleeson both offer further evidence that the UK residential property market is holding up well, just over a year after Brexit and in the midst of ongoing political uncertainty.
Tough short-term trading and long-term leases mean Debenhams shares take another dive
Debenhams shares sank 4% to levels not seen since the end of the last bear market in spring 2009 as new chief executive officer Sergio Bucher admitted that trading in the 15 weeks to 17 June had been “volatile”.
Owner of KitKat and Yorkie told to improve financial performance by US hedge fund
Switzerland’s Nestlé, owner of beloved British brands such as KitKat, Aero, Jelly Tots, Fruit Pastilles and Yorkie, is facing calls from American investor Daniel Loeb to improve its financial and share price performance.
Investors keep backing Berkeley as builder delivers the goods (and more cash)
Second-guessing Tony Pidgeley, chairman is Berkeley Homes, is unwise, so it is not surprising that investors are taking heed by marking the shares higher this morning, as the company’s full-year results reveal it is still adding to land bank and planning further cash returns via a mixture of share buybacks and dividends.
Bank of England policy vote sends pound soaring and stocks plunging
An unexpected shift towards increasing interest rates on the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) is driving the pound higher and at the same time kicking the FTSE 100 lower.
Fed foxes the market by sticking to three interest rate increases for 2017
Just as investors had begun to give up on the Federal Reserve following through on its plan to deliver three interest rate hikes this year, the US central bank has pushed through a second rate, reaffirmed its plans for a third and even stated it intends to start to sterilise its huge Quantitative Easing (QE) programme.
Bellway soothes Brexit nerves for housebuilders
Higher-than-expected sales completions, a 13% jump in the weekly reservation rate and an increased order backlog are all chiming with investors in FTSE 250 house builder Bellway today, as the shares are trading up by more than 4% in early trading, to take them back to where they were in early 2016 before Brexit jitters began to hit home.
Halma reaffirms its inflation-busting credentials as retail price index soars to 3.7%
“It might not be a household name although a record of 38 consecutive increases of more than 5% in Halma’s annual dividend suggests that it should be,” comments Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
Investors decide that Mitie’s numbers are so bad they have to be good
A thumping stated operating loss and a big cut in the full-year dividend both mean that Mitie’s first set of full-year results under new boss Phil Bentley are pretty ugly, but the conclusion to the accounting review, the launch of a new strategy and a drop in net debt are all giving the shares a lift.
Hung Parliament – lessons from 2010
Funds to consider following hung parliament
Smiles all round at Boohoo.com after strong update
Investors should not let Election fever divert their long term strategies
As investors prepare to head to the polls tomorrow, the relative calm pervading the UK stock market suggests investors are pricing in a conservative win. Any other result could therefore lead to some short term volatility but investors should not let this distract them from their long term strategies.
Services PMI adds to feeling UK economy is finding its feet again in Q2
Latest FTSE 100 reshuffle shows e-commerce is a key theme as investors continue to seek growth
The latest reshuffle of the FTSE 100 is due to be confirmed this evening and based on current market capitalisations Hikma Pharmaceuticals and Intu Properties are due to be relegated to the FTSE 250. Royal Mail is hovering on the fringes of relegation, although it looks safe this time around.
Five things to like about M&S' full-year figures and five things to worry about
Early gains in Marks & Spencer shares are taking the stock to fresh 12-month highs as chief executive Steve Rowe targets further strategic and operational changes designed to improve financial performance - even if today’s 2016-17 figures are messy and still raise as many questions as they give answers.
Shaftesbury does not look cheap but bid talk keeps pot boiling for Chinatown owner
In the Jack Nicholson film Chinatown the powerful Noah Cross remarks that even ugly buildings become respectable if they last long enough, so it is perhaps only to be expected that FTSE 250 property play Shaftesbury is attracting a potential suitor, given its owns 14 acres of prime (and far from ugly) London property, including Chinatown, Soho, Carnaby Street and Charlotte Street.
Brexit, retail woes and Robin Hood tax weigh on British Land even as asset values and dividends rise again
A 3% increase in net asset value, a 3% dividend increase for the year just ended and a planned identical hike for the year just begun are not providing support to British Land's shares as investors continue to focus on the possible impact of Brexit, retailers' woes and the Labour Party's proposed Robin Hood tax upon the FTSE 100 Real Estate Investment Trust.
Cash flow optimism boosts Vodafone after thumping loss
Higher cash flow and yet another dividend increase are giving a boost to Vodafone’s shares but the juicy 5.5% yield looks necessary to compensate investors for the modest underlying sales and profit increase revealed by both this set of annual numbers and weak long-term record of growing book, or net asset, value.
Brexit, sterling and inflation dominate policy debate as Bank of England does nothing (again)
Today’s statement from the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee notes that “monetary policy can respond in either direction to changes in the economic outlook” and the 7-1 and 8-0 votes against tighter policy hardly smack of a central bank itching to raise interest rates, especially as the sole dissenter, Kristin Forbes, is stepping down in June.
Talk Talk’s yield is still 4.6% even after today’s swingeing dividend cut
Frustrated Hornby shareholders still looking for light at the end of the tunnel
A recommendation from the management team at Hornby that investors shunt into the sidings a 32.375p-a-share offer from Phoenix Asset Management leaves shareholders with three possible options when it comes to rescuing something from a situation where there seems to be little light at the end of the tunnel for the Corgi, Humbrol and Airfix brands owner.
Fed lays the ground work for further rate hikes and the stock market’s next big test
Oil price boosts BP but poor dividend cover remains a concern for high-yielding stock
Although the better-than-expected first quarter results are putting BP at the very top of the FTSE 100 leaderboard in early trading, with a 2% gain, sceptics of the stock will point out that free cash flow yet again does not cover the quarterly dividend payment of $0.10 a share, fuelling debate over whether the oil major’s shareholder payout could eventually come under pressure.
Rebound in manufacturing sentiment survey eases concerns over UK economy
The monthly manufacturing purchasing managers index (PMI) soared to 57.3, the highest reading since November 2013 and comfortably above the last 12 months’ average of 53.8.
Disappointing US Q1 GDP growth number makes the Fed’s job that bit harder
Dividend hopes stoke RBS’ shares as fresh write-downs weigh on Barclays
The week ahead: 1 May 2017 – BP, UK sentiment surveys and US interest rates
Investors feel the width and ignore the quality of earnings as Lloyds shares rise
“A 68% jump in stated net income at Lloyds is giving the high street lender’s shares an early boost as investors feel the width of the bank’s first-quarter profits and decide not to worry about the quality,” comments Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
Activist investor logs two wins in a week – will BHP Billiton be next?
American activist investor Elliott Management is booking its second win of the week today as Dutch chemicals giant Akzo Nobel outlines a radical restructuring plan just two days after Klaus Kleinfeld, the boss of American firm Arconic resigned, following a protracted battle with this particular investor.
Booker doubts, price pressure and pension deficit take shine off Tesco turnaround story
Bank of England unlikely to flinch as inflation shows first signs of easing
Weak payrolls figure raises doubts over US economy even as FED ponders further rate rises
Why the Fed’s debate about shrinking its balance sheet really, really matters
UK services industry sentiment offers succour to bulls of UK economy
"An improvement in the third and final economic sentiment survey of the week, the services purchasing managers’ index (PMI), will offer some comfort to Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond and those investors whose portfolio strategy is based on an improvement in the UK’s economic momentum in 2017 and beyond,” says Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
Apple design decision shakes Imagination to its core
Shares in Imagination are down by two-thirds this morning after key client Apple’s decision not to use the FTSE Small Cap’s silicon chip designs in products due for release in 18 to 24 months’ time.
James Halstead polishes its reputation with yet another dividend increase
Twenty-six FTSE 100 firms have raised their dividend every year for the past decade but when it comes to consistent increases in the shareholder pay-out few can match AIM-quoted flooring expert James Halstead, whose interim dividend hike today adds to a streak of consecutive increases that stretches back to the late 1970s.
US payrolls figure sets scene for Fed’s third’s rate rise – historically a tricky hurdle for US stocks to jump
Today’s forecast beating non-farm payrolls number of 235,000 paves the way for a US Federal Reserve rate hike next Wednesday.
IA lowers yield hurdle for UK Equity Income sector
The Investment Association has announced the conclusion of its UK Equity Income sector review.
Paddy Power Betfair takes a tumble as bookmaker gears up for Cheltenham Festival
Sterling stumbles as inflation remains below Bank of England’s target
Consumer price index (CPI) inflation increases to 1.8% in January, its highest level since June 2014
Trio of dividend hikes puts on a fresh shine on gold mining shares
Gold mining shares are taking on a fresh lustre after larger-than-expected dividend increases from FTSE 100 firm Randgold Resources and FTSE 250 members Centamin and Acacia Mining, which is the best performer in the FTSE All-Share today with a near-7% gain.
The week ahead – Inflation, Rolls-Royce and Acacia Mining
On Tuesday 14 February we will see if the weak pound continues to stoke UK inflation, as well as annual results from Rolls-Royce and gold miner Acacia. Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, looks at some of the key points to keep an eye out for in those announcements.
New Woodford Income Focus fund
Woodford Investment Management is expected to launch a new income ‘focus’ fund in March.
Investment Association investor behaviour statistics
Ryan Hughes, head of fund selection at AJ Bell comments on the Investment Association’s statistics on UK investor behaviour for 2016.
SSE to warm cockles of income-hunters’ hearts
The week ahead: 30 January 2017 – Interest Rates, SSE and Shell
Central banks take centre stage this week with the Bank of Japan, US Federal Reserve and Bank of England all delivering their latest monetary policy decisions. Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell, looks at some of the key points to keep an eye out for in those announcements, as well as the trading updates from SSE and Royal Dutch Shell.
Trump’s TPP and tariff plan fails to account for the rise of the robots
PM’s industrial strategy has plenty of long-term potential
UK inflation gathers pace on back of weak pound and rising oil price
M&S beats low expectations but still has much work to do
Festive figures suggest Argos could yet prove a coup for Sainsbury’s Coupe
Seasonal supermarket sweep takes Morrisons’ shares to three-year high
William Hill still under the whip as key Cheltenham Festival approaches
Can the FTSE 100 extend its winning streak?
Persimmon offers some reassurance to investors in house builders
Mortgage approval figures hold firm as builders look to bounce back from Bovis
Trinity Mirror: absolute New Year bargain or vicious value trap?
The Fed finally moves on US interest rates but will it stick to the 'dot' plot
Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell comments on the Fed’s decision to raise US interest rates.
Berkeley buyback plan reassures investors but it does raise questions too
House builder Berkeley’s shares are up 4% today.
FTSE 100 changes
FTSE has just announced the latest changes to the FTSE 100 index.
Bank of England stress tests highlight the dangers to banks’ dividend payments
Mortgage approval figures offer house builders grounds for hope
FTSE reshuffle - Continence care trumps gold and construction as ConvaTec prepares to enter FTSE 100
Wednesday will see the latest reshuffle in the constituents of the FTSE 100 and on the basis of their market capitalisations gold miner Polymetal and Travis Perkins will drop out after three-month and three-year stays respectively, with market newcomer ConvaTec certain of promotion, given its £4.8 billion market valuation.
Unchanged third-quarter GDP growth estimate offers comfort but still raises questions
Autumn statement - stock market winners and losers
FCA asset management market study
The impact of charges on active fund management performance is brought into stark contrast by the FCA market study.
Snapchat float - investors should tread carefully
“Two factors make it perfectly understandable why Snapchat’s parent company, Snap Inc., is reportedly working on a flotation,” says AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould.
Surprise dip in inflation but a big jump in producer prices shows what may lie ahead
US election - tariffs, protectionism and inflation the key fears as Trump takes the White House
Tough first six months at M&S for Steve Rowe
A 20% slide in the shares during Steve Rowe’s first six months in office is the worst start to a tenure in office of any of M&S’s last six bosses, in share price terms.
Tough first six months at M&S for Steve Rowe
A 20% slide in the shares during Steve Rowe’s first six months in office is the worst start to a tenure in office of any of M&S’s last six bosses, in share price terms.
M&S abandons financial engineering to focus on its operations but must now find its fashion handwriting
A flat interim dividend, the abandonment of both the share buyback scheme and special dividends and a restructuring programme at home and abroad shows that Marks & Spencer boss Steve Rowe is sensibly focusing on managing the underlying business rather than just the reported numbers.
HSBC shrinks its way to share price increases as banks pain trade intensifies
Inflation overshoot and static interest rates
Perky pound could bring domestic stocks and sectors back onto investors’ radar
“Today’s High Court ruling that Parliament should get to vote on whether Article 50 is triggered is already sparking a recovery in sterling,” says Russ Mould, AJ Bell’s investment director.
Fed has election jitters over interest rate hike
Shell’s numbers hit the spot as BP encounters a bump in output
“Today’s results from the UK’s two oil majors are better than expected, both firms are continuing to cut costs and investors will be particularly pleased to see maintained dividend payments as Shell and BP report their third quarter-numbers,” says Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.