Date: Monday 01 Sep 2008
- Market Movers
- techMARK 1,472.05 +0.23%
- FTSE 100 5,596.40 -0.71%
- FTSE 250 9,371.80 -0.11%
LONDON (ShareCast) - Falling metal prices continue to keep London in negative territory, with heavyweight miners the big casualties as US traders take time off for Labor Day.
All the major metals headed lower Monday, giving miners a bashing. A report by the International Copper Study Group indicating that London Metal Exchange copper stocks are at their highest level since February affected sentiment.
Kazakhmys, Anglo American, Antofagasta, BHP Billiton and Vedanta are among the worst performers, but are being given a run for their money by oil majors, down on weaker oil prices. Cairn Energy, Tullow Oil and BG Group have slipped.
Enterprise Inns is looking glum after two investment banks downgraded the pubs group last week. Mitchells & Butlers and JD Wetherspoon fall back in sympathy.
The London Stock Exchange is down after the Financial Times said the stock exchange will introduce deep fee cuts and incentives to defend it self against a wave of new entrants in equities trading.
Meanwhile, Turquoise, the rival trading platform to the London Stock Exchange, is confident of beating earlier forecasts that it would steal a 5% market share by Christmas, its chief executive told The Times.
Petrofac is posting strong gains after the oil and gas facilities service provider and Mubadala Petroleum Services Company established a United Arab Emirates joint venture, Petrofac Emirates. Sector peer Wood Group is lower, however, while elsewhere in the oil area Cairn Energy is in the red, despite higher oil prices..
Insurance companies figure prominently among the few blue-chips on the climb, Legal & General and Old Mutual are going well, but RSA is best performer on talk of possible bid from Zurich Financial Services.
Floor coverings specialist Headlam warned that due to the unpredictable nature of the current market place, it faces a challenge meeting its trading objectives for 2008. In the last four months to the end of August, “the markets have proved to be increasingly demanding, particularly in the UK,” it said as it posted half-year profits of £20.9m from £20.5m previously.
Market research firm Taylor Nelson Sofres reiterated its rejection of WPP’s offer after the "low level of acceptances" from its shareholders for the offer. On Friday, WPP said it was extending its offer period to 12 September 2008 after it received only 8.61% of acceptances.
Five-a-side football centre operator Goals Soccer reported a 20% hike in half year pre-tax profit after it opened more centres. Pre-tax profit at the East Kilbride, Scottish based group rose to £3.7m in the six months to 30 June 2008 from £3.1m the year before. Sales rose 18% to £11.4m.
Annual profit remained flat at European patent and trade mark legal firm Murgitroyd Group while turnover increased 12.7%.
RCG remains confident about the second half as the biometrics and security solutions provider announced a 73% hike in profits during the first six months of 2008.
Engineering firm Bodycote is weaker after being downgraded to ``underperform'' from ``neutral'' by Merrill Lynch, on concerns over future earnings. Business publisher Informa is lifted, however, by being added to UBS’s “most preferred” list in the Swiss bank’s “short-term alpha preferences portfolio.”
Digital camera group Andor said trading has been very strong in the second half and expects year end result will significantly outperform expectations.