- gains 20 points
- Lloyds surges as Supreme Court allows motor finance appeal
- Wall Street set for mixed start as US inflation figures loom
12.59pm: Oil picks up as Biden reportedly mulls harsher Russian sanctions
Oil prices climbed on Wednesday as reports emerged that president Joe Biden was mulling further, harsher sanctions on Russia before leaving the White House.
According to Bloomberg, Biden has weighed restrictions on Russian oil exports, such as those targeting foreign buyers, which would add to an existing ban on imports.
Biden had so far resisted such measures on the grounds they could boost energy prices, sources said.
However, oil’s recent dip and speculation over incoming president Donald Trump’s efforts to potentially force Ukraine into a deal with Russia to end their near three-year conflict had opened to door to more aggressive measures, they added.
Benchmark brent crude climbed by 1.4% to US$73.07 a barrel on Wednesday, having sat as low as US$70.83 last week.
12.36pm: Lloyds tops risers as Supreme Court allows motor finance appeal
Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LSE:LON:) surged on Wednesday as the Supreme Court allowed an appeal against October’s ruling over motor finance mis-selling.
Lloyds, which is among those exposed to potential compensation, gained 4.3% to top the FTSE 100’s risers, while peer Close Brothers (F:) Group PLC (LSE:CBG) jumped 8.3%.
Shares in both had been hit by a Court of Appeal decision that hidden commissions from banks to salespeople around car finance were illegal.
The Supreme Court on Wednesday said it would allow Close Brothers to appeal the ruling, which opened the door for lenders to potentially have to pay billions in redress.
Lloyds has set aside £450 million to cover possible compensation, while Banco Santander (BME:) (LSE:BNC) unveiled a £295 million provision recently.
Close Brothers has not disclosed its potential hit but stopped writing new motor finance deals in October in the wake of the ruling and pointed to a possible impact next year.
12.04pm: Elon Musk’s SpaceX bags $350bn valuation
SpaceX has become the world’s most valuable private start-up after reportedly scoring a valuation of US$350 billion on a new employee buyback deal.
A new $1.25 billion deal will see SpaceX and investors repurchase its common shares at $185 each from employees, according to the Financial Times.
SpaceX had purchased shares for US$112 apiece when rebuying stock from employees in September, meaning its value has surged 65% since.
The rise coincides with a boom in the value of Musk’s companies following Donald Trump’s US election victory last month.
Musk had been a key backer of Trump during election campaigning and has since been appointed head of his new department of government efficiency.
11.46am: Wall Street set for mixed start ahead of inflation data
The mood on Wall Street appeared mixed ahead of key inflation figures for November.
Futures had the and S&P 500 up 0.3% and 0.1% respectively ahead of Wednesday’s opening bell, but the was seen 0.1% lower.
Focus has been on Wednesday’s consumer price index reading for November as markets mull the likelihood of an interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve later this month.
Expectations are for inflation to have risen by 2.7% over the year to November and by 0.3% month on month.
“Barring any shocks, the likelihood of an interest rate cut is high next week,” interactive investor analyst Richard Hunter commented.
Predictions over the pace of rate cuts next year have been dialled back though, he added.
“The twin drivers of a surprisingly robust economy which has shown few signs of heading towards the previously feared recession, alongside some caution that the president-elect is likely to introduce some measures which are inflationary, could well keep a lid on the monetary easing path.”
11.33am: Inditex (BME:) shares slide as high expectations bite
Zara owner Inditex fell almost 6% after results showing a surge in profit over the first nine months of the year appeared to underwhelm.
Inditex unveiled a 9.9% increase in pre-tax profit to €5.8 billion (£4.8 billion) and 7.1% uptick in sales to €27.4 billion for the first nine months of the year on Wednesday.
However, analysts pointed out that the figures reflected a “small miss” against estimates.
Deutsche noted sales were 2% behind consensus and that below double-digit profit growth would likely be viewed as “disappointing”.
“Current trading is fractionally light but not inconsistent with a likely double-digit [fourth quarter] topline delivery,” Jefferies added.
“The group’s impressive growth credentials look confirmed, but the shares likely needed a better print to prevent some profit-taking today.”
Shares fell 5.9% to €51.46.
11.11am: M&S enjoying Christmas-fuelled boom
Marks and Spencer Group PLC (LSE:LON:) has enjoyed a boom in sales in the run-up to Christmas as shoppers flock towards premium goods for the festive season, industry figures show.
NIQ reported on Wednesday that M&S’ grocery sales ticked up 10.6% against a year earlier in the three months to the end of November.
Kantar separately flagged a similar surge in food and drink sales at M&S, which also deals in clothing and homeware, on Tuesday.
Almost one in three households had shopped for groceries at M&S, Kantar highlighted, ahead of a further anticipated boost to sales across the sector as Christmas neared.
M&S had previously guided towards strong festive trading in interim results, which showed first-half profits up 17%.
Overall, sales growth across the sector in the four weeks to November 30 slowed from 4.0% to 3.7%, according to NIQ, with consumers said to be holding out for December to shop for Christmas.
10.39am: Ashtead slumps again as analysts cut targets after profit warning
Ashtead Group PLC (LSE:LON:) faced a second day of sharp share price declines on Wednesday as analysts trimmed estimates in the wake of Tuesday’s cut to full-year guidance.
Though the industrial equipment rental firm detailed plans to shift its primary listing from London to the US, the news was overshadowed by a separate profit warning in interims.
RBC, JPMorgan (NYSE:) and Goldman Sachs (NYSE:) were among a string of banks to wind down Ashtead’s share price targets as a result.
RBC cut from 7450p to 6,750p, noting Ashtead’s performance against peers had “been called into question in the near term”.
JPMorgan wound down its target from 7,300p to 6,900p in the meantime, while Goldman cut to 6600p.
“[We] still think the stock can ‘work’ on a 12-month view,” RBC added, highlighting the subsequent launch of a US$1.5 billion (£1.2 billion) buyback from Ashtead.
However, Ashtead fell a further 6.5% to 5,044p after having slumped 14% on Tuesday.
9.49am: HSBC targeting $3bn in savings through overhaul – reports
HSBC Holdings PLC (LSE:LON:) is said to be targeting as much as US$3 billion (£2.4 billion) in savings through turnaround plans under new chief executive George Elhedery.
Bloomberg-cited sources said managers had been informed of the rough target last week and told the major overhaul would take until June next year to complete.
Reports emerged last month that HSBC was to shed hundreds of senior jobs under the reshuffle, with staff told to reapply for roles in its newly established corporate and institutional banking division.
HSBC had unveiled plans to split its global operations from three to four businesses in October.
These were to include Hong Kong and UK divisions, alongside corporate & institutional banking, and international wealth & premier banking wings.
9.33am: British Airways owner tops risers after Deutsche upgrade
British Airways owner International Consolidated Airlines Group (LON:) SA (LSE:IAG) gained on Wednesday after being upgraded to a ‘buy’ rating by Deutsche Bank (ETR:) analysts.
Lifting the airline owner from a ‘hold’, Deutsche noted capacity constraints on transatlantic flights should leave IAG able to lift prices into 2025.
“This is supported by early evidence from our fares tracker and underpinned by the macro outlook for the US, the UK and Spain,” analysts said.
Lower fuel costs should also act as a tailwind over the coming year, leaving scope for ahead-of-consensus earnings growth, according to the bank.
“We think the journey towards a better BA has only just begun,” Deutsche continued.
“Improvements at Aer Lingus, the continued leveraging of the Spanish platforms and growing IAG loyalty should also help.”
A 400p share price target was also set, against 215p previously.
Shares climbed 1.9% to 287.4p on Wednesday.
9.15am : Grey mood ahead of US inflation read, Endeavour shines on new project
Grey cold weather in London reflected the mood of the stock market with the Footsie index sitting at around 19 points lower ahead of the US inflation number later on.
Expectations are for a further increase in headline inflation to 2.7% through November, following October’s 2.6% rise with the implications for cuts in US interest rates the main point of interest.
“Without an upside inflation surprise,” anticipations will remain for a 25 basis point rate cut in the Fed’s November meeting, IG analysts commented.
Elsewhere, Endeavour topped the index on the news that numbers from a study point to a new project at Assafou in the Ivory Coast becoming a Tier-One gold-producing mine.
The pre-feasibility study indicated possible production of 329,000 oz a year at sustaining costs of US$892 an ounce over the first 10 years with a total estimated mine life of fifteen years.
Shares rose 1.7% to 1,525p.
FTSE 100 down 19 at 8,260.
8.15am: Stocks drop further at open
The FTSE 100 lost further ground as trading got underway on Wednesday, falling 25 points to 8,254.
Ashtead Group PLC (LSE:AHT) topped fallers for a second day running after Tuesday’s profit warning, while miners also weighed once again.
Endeavour Mining PLC (LON:) (LSE:EDV, TSX:EDV, OTCQX:EDVMF) and British Airways owner International Consolidated Airlines Group SA (LSE:IAG) were among the early risers in the meantime.
8.10am: Profit jumps at Inditex
Zara, Pull & Bear and Bershka owner Inditex has reported a surge in profit for the first nine months of 2024.
Pre-tax profit climbed 9.9% to €5.8 billion (£4.8 billion) during the first nine months of the year, Inditex reported on Wednesday.
Sales grew by 7.1%, or by 10.5% at constant currency, to €27.4 billion, with Inditex highlighting “very satisfactory development both in stores and online”.
Autumn and winter collections had been “well received” most recently, Inditex said, flagging constant currency sales growth of 9% over the course of November and early December… Read more
7.50am: BAT flags improving non-tobacco profitability
British American Tobacco PLC (LSE:LON:) has flagged improving profitability from its non-tobacco products and doubled down on guidance for the full year.
Both revenue and adjusted profit over the year climbed in line with guidance for low-single-figure organic growth, the cigarette maker said on Wednesday.
Profitability from non-tobacco, or new category, products improved further, while revenue growth was set to have accelerated over the second half.
Such products include the likes of vapes and oral nicotine pouches, with the company noting it was progressing towards being a “smokeless” business by 2035.
“Our second-half performance acceleration is driven by the phasing of new categories innovation, the benefits of investment in US commercial actions and the unwind of wholesaler inventory movements,” chief executive Tadeu Marroco commented… Read more
7.14am: Stocks set for muted start
The FTSE 100 was seen little changed ahead of Wednesday’s trading, after having shed 71 points on Tuesday.
Miners had weighed on the index on Tuesday after worse-than-expected Chinese export data hit sentiment around the world’s struggling second-largest economy.
Asian markets were mixed overnight into Wednesday, with South Korea’s Kospi index up just over 1% and the biggest mover.
Attention on Wednesday was set to be on a string of company updates before US inflation figures for November later in the day.
5.00am: Wednesday’s schedule
Wednesday brings updates from the likes of BAT, Inditex and Tui before US inflation figures later in the day.
Zara-owner Inditex is expected to up guidance in its third-quarter results… Read more
BAT has been in favour in recent months ahead of its full-year update… Read more
Tui should have benefitted from continued strong travel and holiday demand… Read more
Announcements due:
Finals: British American PLC (LSE:BATS), Tui AG
Trading updates: S&U PLC, Inditex
Interims: Cohort PLC, Optima Health PLC
Finals: Gcp Infrastructure Investments Ltd
US earnings: Adobe (NASDAQ:) Inc
AGMs: Baillie Gifford Japan Trust PLC, Gattaca PLC, Guardian Metal Resources PLC, Microsaic Systems PLC, Pci-Pal PLC, Tavistock Investments PLC, Time Out Group PLC, Volution Group PLC (LON:)
Economic announcements: MBA Mortgage Applications (US), Consumer Price Index (US), Inventories (US), Budget Statement (US)