Market Updates
London Rallies as Miners, Oil Stocks Surge
Ivaylo
27 Dec, 2006
New York City
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The London market opened positively after the Christmas break, as higher mining and oil stocks aided a solid rally. InterContinental Hotels made further gains as traders continued to rely on the credibility of talks of potential bid interest in the company. Also Diageo is not too far behind as rumors suggest that SABMiller could buy Indian spirits maker Mount Shivalik Group. The FTSE 100 opened 0.8% higher at 6,239.6, an increase of about 50 points.
[R]9:30 AM London benchmark index advanced Wednesday on miners, oil stocks.[/R]
The FTSE 100 in London started 0.8% higher at 6,239.6, an increase of about 50 points.
Advancers
London-listed oil leaders supported the FTSE 100 uptrend as crude prices recoverd from losses in the previous session to re-state themselves around $61 per barrel. BP gained 0.8% with Royal Dutch Shell advanced 0.5%.
Mining stocks were also in focus in line with stronger commodities markets, adding their weight to the overall advance. Vedanta Resources was 2.4% higher and Anglo American added 1.6%.
Pre-Christmas talk of bid interest in InterContinental Hotels supported its shares as trading resumed. The company gaine further 5.6% and kept its place at the top of the large-cap advancers.
Drinks company Diageo, brewer of Guinnes, Bailey’s and Johnnie Walker whiskey, advanced 2.3% on strong buying interest.
Barclays stated that its sale of FirstCaribbean to the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce generated $989 million in cash. Its shares gained 1.2%.
Decliners
There were no major decliners in an opening of strong index gains. Only drug developer Skypharma is flat following its statement that its Flutiform project is costing more than expected.
[R]7:30 AM Asian markets finished mostly higher Wednesday, Japan, HK rally.[/R]
Asian markets finished mostly higher on Wednesday. The Nikkei 225 Index in Japan gained 0.31% to close at 17,223.15, which is the highest closing level since May 8. Export-oriented stocks and buying in large-caps boosted the market pacing overnight gains on US markets in post-holiday trading. Toyota gained 1.9% after reports that an official at the company met last week in Tokyo with his counterpart from U.S. auto maker Ford. Other advancers included Honda, 0.99% higher and electronics maker Sony, up 0.54%.
The Hang Seng Index in Hong Kong advanced 2.1% to 19,725.73, supported by China Netcom which soared 31% on talks that it may buy assets from rival China Unicom, which surged nearly 8%. Chinese financial stocks also rallied tracking a surge on the domestic market and proposed tax policies on the mainland. Financial firm China Life gained 11.7%, Ping An rallied 17.2% and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China jumped 13.2%.
The Shanghai Composite Index in China added 2.3% to 2,536.39. The benchmark stock index settled above the 2,500 level for the first time, as securities funds were eager to push up large-capitalized companies. Singapore shares ended up after hitting a record high intraday on broad strength in large-caps. The Straits Times Index advanced 0.6% to 2,961.25.
In Australia, expectations of a strong month end fueled stocks to a record high. The S&P/ASX 200 Index edged 0.7% higher to a record high finish of 5,643.2. In New Zealand stocks touched a new all-time high in thin post-holiday trading. The NZX-50 Index gained 0.3% to 4,032.07. Taiwan closed marginally higher as the Weighted Price Index of the Taiwan Stock Exchange inched 0.1% higher to 7,733.18.
[R]6:30AM Europe advanced in early trade Wednesday on stronger euro, weaker oil.[/R]
European markets were higher on Wednesday. In early trading, the FTSE 100 in London was up 0.8%, Frankfurt DAX gained of 1.2%, and the French CAC 40 rose 0.9%.
Advancers
InterContinental Hotels led UK advancers, advancing more than 4% on bid talk. The company has turned down any comments in the past on such rumours.
Diageo and SABMiller, both beer makers, gained each around 1.5% and cigarette maker British American Tobacco edged 1.3% higher. Tobacco shares in Europe have advanced since Gallaher Group stated it was in takeover talks.
U.K. clothing retailer Moss Brothers rallied 10% after a report that it may get an 80-million-pound offer from Icelandic investment group Baugur
DaimlerChrysler AG, the fifth-largest carmaker in the world, and Arriva Plc, the biggest operator of buses in London, gained supported by lower energy costs. Daimler gained 1.2% and Arriva added 2%.
Decliners
UCB SA was the leading decliner, down 2.4%. Shares in the Belgian maker of the Zyrtec allergy drug plummeted after U.S. regulators wanted more information on its experimental Cimzia treatment for Crohn disease.
Oil and gold
Crude oil was near $61 a barrel on forecasts that mild weather in the U.S. will reduce demand for heating oil. Crude oil for February delivery dropped 1 cent to $61.09 a barrel in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange in early trade in London. Brent crude for February settlement rose 11 cents to $61.21 a barrel on the ICE Futures exchange in London.
Gold for immediate delivery rose $2.50, or 0.4%, to $627.20 an ounce in early trade in London. Prices rose $3.95 yesterday.
Currencies
The U.S. dollar was mostly down versus other major currencies in European trading Wednesday morning. The euro traded at $1.3157, up from $1.3111 late Tuesday in New York. The British pound is set for its biggest annual gain since 1990 as it became the third-most popular reserve currency in the world and the Bank of England raised interest rates to their highest in five years. Against the dollar, the pound traded at $1.9598 early trade in London, up from $1.9534.
The dollar has plunged this month against the yen on speculation a slowing economy will make the Federal Reserve lower interest rates next year. The dollar fell to 118.65 yen from 119.15 late yesterday in New York.
[R]5:00 AM Gold and silver prices edged higher on Tuesday, restricted by oil slump.[/R]
February gold settled $4.60 higher at $626.90 a troy ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange. March silver added 9 cents to finish at $12.725 an ounce. In other metals trading, January platinum gained $1.50 to end at $1,123 an ounce, while the April contract was steady at $1,132 an ounce. March palladium advanced $3 to settle at $329.20 an ounce. March copper contract added 2.4 cents to close at $2.8780 per pound.
In energy trading on the Nymex, the February crude oil shed $1.31 to $61.10 a barrel after plummeting as low as $60.50 a barrel, the lowest level for a front month contract since late November. January heating oil slipped 5.87 cents to $1.6233 a gallon and January unleaded gasoline finished with a loss of 5.08 cents at $1.5722 a gallon. January natural gas futures settled 52.2 cents, or 7.9%, lower at $6.113 a million British thermal units.
On the New York Board of Trade, Arabica coffee futures advanced after speculators and funds were active buyers. Overall volume flows were flat, however, as the London coffee market was closed. March coffee futures gained 2.3 cents higher at $1.2770 a pound. March raw sugar futures dipped 0.06 cents to end at 11.86 cents a pound.
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