Market Updates

FTSE Rebounds on Royal & Sun Alliance

Ivaylo
13 Jun, 2007
New York City

    London markets were higher by mid-day on Wednesday, despite gilt yields hit seven-year highs, following US benchmark bond yields and thus added to worries of higher corporate borrowing costs. A stronger mining sector and boyant Royal & Sun Alliance helped London recover most of its early losses. At mid-day, the FTSE 100 canceled out early morning losses and was trading up 0.07%.

[R]9:30AM London edges higher at mid-day Wednesday on miners, Royal & Sun Alliance.[/R]

At mid-day, the FTSE 100 canceled out early morning losses and was trading up 0.07% at 6,527, a gain of 6 points.

Advancers

Royal & Sun Alliance led the gainers, advancing 3.8%, on speculation that American Insurance Group could be mulling a bid for the insurer. Miners supported the index otherwise under pressure as the global bond sell-off accelerated. Antofagasta gained 3.3 % after the Chilean copper producer announced the price of copper had proven stable in the light of recent economic declines and would remain high well into next year.

Rio Tinto, Xstrata, and BHP Billiton, three of the large-caps in the sector, all advanced after they stepped up action on some Australian coal sales tracking a severe storm in southeastern Australian that flooded coal mines and disrupted ports. Rio Tinto rose 2.7%, Xstrata gained 2%, and BHP Billiton rose 1.2%.

Decliners

Three large-cap companies traded without further rights to their latest dividend payments. Johnson Matthey fell 2.54 %. Cable & Wireless fell 1.7% lower,. Kelda lost 2.4%. Wolseley, the world biggest distributor of building supplies, lost 1.9% after data showed a 2.5% drop overnight in the US homebuilders index.

[R]8:30AM Asian markets finish lower Wednesday with Japan, HK leading decliners.[/R]

Asian markets finished lower on Wednesday. The Nikkei 225 Average finished the day 0.2% lower at 17,733. Real-estate issues were hurt the most, like Mitsubishi Estate which dropped 1.7%. Real-estate companies are sensitive to interest rates. Hong Kong Hang Seng Index fell 0.3% to close at 20,579. Property stocks led the decline in Hong Kong. Wharf Holdings fell 1.4%, Sino Land shed 0.9% and Hang Lung Properties lost 0.8%. Swire Pacific slipped 0.5%, and New World Development fell 0.5%.

South Korean Kospi Index lost 0.5% to 1,722. Advances in brokerage sector bucked a general downward trend, as rising concerns over inflation and likely interest rate hikes in global economies sparked profit-taking. Seoul Securities closed 12% higher, while NH Investment & Securities advanced 9.6%. Brokerage firms could not helped the market to end higher, though. Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering ended 3% lower. GS Engineering & Construction fell 4.2%, Samsung Electronics slipped 0.9% while Hyundai Motor lost 1%.

Shanghai Composite Index rallied 2.6% to end at 4,176, bucking the overall downtrend on a strong local currency which boosted property developers and financial companies. China Vanke rose 5.5% and China Merchants Property rallied 8%. Among financial firms, China Life gained 2.2% and China Merchants Bank ended 4.7% higher. Australian S&P/ASX 200 dipped 1% to 6,181. BHP Billiton declined 1.7% after copper on LME lost 2.5% and nickel fell 5.8%. Interest rate sensitive stocks also declined - ANZ Bank fell 1.2%.

[R]7:30AM NY-6:30PM Mumbai Sensex loses 128 points Wednesday in lackluster session.[/R]

The Sensex on BSE finished Wednesday 127.92 points lower, or 0.91%, at 14,003.03.

The market-breadth was very weak. For 1,083 stocks which advanced, 1,372 declined and 85 were unchanged. Of the 30 stocks in the Sensex, only nine stocks advanced, while all the rest declined. The turnover on BSE was Rs 3,530 crore, lower than Rs 3,836 crore on Tuesday. On NSE, the turnover was Rs 8,096 crore, slightly lower than Rs 8,177 crore on Tuesday.

Economic news

The strike of the employees of state-owned airline Indian brought to a halt operations and wreaked havoc in airports across the country today. The workers paid no heed to the government’s threat of a lock-out, and were unfazed by warnings that the strike was illegal.

The rupee retreated against the U.S. dollar on Wednesday, June 13 2007, as buying from importers broke its rising streak.. In early trade, the rupee stood at 40.855 per dollar, lower than the previous close of 40.747.

Trading highlights

New issue Time Technoplast was the most-active stock with a turnover of Rs 636.30 crore followed by Reliance and Nestle. Time Technoplast ended at Rs 480.35 on BSE, 53% over the IPO price of Rs 315.

Advancers

Dr.Reddy''s surged 2.7% to Rs 628 and was the best performing stock in the Sensex. The stock rallied after Credit Suisse increased its rating to outperform from neutral. Satyam surged 1.7% to Rs 486. All other major IT stocks declined, though.

Tata Motors advanced 0.7% to Rs 646, Hindalco Industries advanced 0.6% to Rs 160 and Cipla edged 0.1% higher to Rs 208.

Decliners

SBI led the decliners, down 3.2% to Rs 1,289. The bank declined on worries of a possible interest rate hike by RBI in the wake of the strong industrial production data for April. Other banks also lost. ICICI Bank dipped almost 1% to Rs 910. The bank announced today it had moved forward documents to raise up to Rs 8,750 crore, or $2.1 billion, in India in a sale of shares as part of a programme to raise up to $5 billion both in India and the U.S.

Reliance Communications lost 2.5% at Rs 486 and Hindustan Unilever and Larsen & Toubro sank nearly 2% each to Rs 186 and Rs 1,871, respectively. Tata Steel eased from high of Rs 611 and was down 1.3% to Rs 595. Index heavy Reliance Industries slipped 1.5% to Rs 1,674.

Except for Satyam, all other major IT stocks declined. TCS was down 1% to Rs 1,202, Infosys lost 0.4% to Rs 1,980 and Wipro shed 1.6% to Rs 531. Cement stocks were also hit as Gujarat Ambuja dipped 1.3% to Rs 109 and ACC, which was leading the advancers yesterday, dropped around 1% to Rs 979.

[R]6:30AM European stocks decline on Wednesday on interest rate fears.[/R]

European markets declined on Wednesday. The U.K. FTSE 100 index slipped 0.1% at 6,513.10, the German DAX Xetra 30 index declined 0.5% at 7,643.90 and the French CAC-40 index lost 0.3% at 5,879.90. National benchmarks fell in all 17 western European Markets that were open.

Advancers

Alliance & Leicester gained 0.9% after it upgraded core operating profit for 2007 at the top end of the forecast range as it also named finance director David Bennett as its next CEO.

Spanish clothing chain Inditex gained 1.7% after its first-quarter net profit rose 33% to 200 million euros, with sales up 19% to 2.0 billion euros. Profit of 185 million euros had been expected from the owner of the Zara and Massimo Dutti clothing chains.

Decliners

Allianz, the largest insurer in the region, slid 0.8 percent and Deutsche Bank, the largest bank in Germany, fell 0.8 percent.

Utilities fell, being most sensitive to interest rate hikes. British Energy, whose nuclear reactors can produce about a fifth of the electricity in the U.K., slipped 1.3 percent. RWE AG, Germany second-largest utility, shed 1.1 percent.

Construction companies also suffered. Bouygues, the second-biggest construction company in the world, fell 2 percent. Skanska AB, No. 3 construction company in Europe, dropped 1.6 percent. Acciona SA, Spain fourth-biggest construction company, slid 3 percent.

Oil and gold

Crude oil traded little changed in New York on talks U.S. gasoline stockpiles advanced for a sixth straight week as refiners increased output. Oil for July delivery was down 19 cents at $65.16 a barrel in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Gasoline for July delivery was at $2.13 a gallon in New York after falling 0.8 percent to $2.135 yesterday. Brent crude oil for July settlement fell 21 cents to $68.58 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures exchange in London.

Gold traded in London at $644.10, down from $648.60 late Tuesday. Silver opened in London at $12.98, down from $13.09.

Currencies

The U.S. dollar surged against other major currencies in European trading Wednesday morning. The euro traded at $1.3271, down from $1.3318 late Tuesday in New York. The British pound traded at $1.9693, down from $1.9727. The dollar fetched 122.32 Japanese yen, up from 121.82.

[R]5:30AM Copper loses more than 2% Tuesday, gold and silver sink on profit-booking.[/R]

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, copper shed 6.9 cents to end at $3.287 a pound. Chinese imports of copper fell 28 percent in May from April. China is the greatest source of demand in the metals futures and any waning in Chinese imports unnerves the market.

Precious metals prices also retreated. Gold for August delivery shed $5.90 an ounce to settle at $653.10 on the Nymex as the U.S. dollar gained against the euro and other world currencies. Gold is considered a hedge against inflation. July silver gave up 18.5 cents, settling at $13.09 an ounce.

After crude oil futures added more than 1$ a barrel on Monday, gold lost on Tuesday on profit-taking. Light, sweet crude for July delivery fell 62 cents to close at $65.35. Gasoline futures dropped 1.63 cents to end at $2.135 a gallon.

On the Chicago Board of Trade, wheat rallied, extending gains from Monday when it advanced 28 cents. July wheat rose 9 cents to settle at $5.65 a bushel on the CBOT. July corn lost 2.4 cents a bushel to close at $3.934, while soybeans finished down 3.4 cents at $8.264 a bushel.

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