Market Updates
London Lower, Blair Leaves
Ivaylo
27 Jun, 2001
New York City
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The UK benchmark index tumbled Wednesday, the day when Tony Blair stepped down as prime minister. The market fell on concerns over a negative trading update from Northern Rock and losses in ex-dividend stocks. Sir John Gieve, the deputy governor of the Bank of England, also damped sentiment saying that rates were too low to curb credit and demand growth. In late morning trade, the FTSE 100 shed 32.2 points.
[R]9:30AM The FTSE 100 is lower in mid-morning trade Wednesday.[/R]
The UK market is down on Wednesday. In late morning trade, the FTSE 100 lost 32.2 points to 6,527.1.
Political news
Tony Blair stepped down as prime minister today to make room for Gordon Brown, Chancellor of the Exchequer in Mr. Blair’s cabinet, to head the UK Government.
Advancers
Bus and train group Stagecoach was one of the very few advancers in the morning, reporting a big rise in full year profits Wednesday tracking strong growth in its bus and rail operations in the UK and North America. The stock rose 5.3%.
Hikma Pharmaceuticals surged after saying that first half revenues are expected to increase about 40%. The shares of the company advanced 5.4%.
Decliners
Northern Rock, a mortgage bank, plummeted 9.6% as it downgraded its profit guidance quoting a rise in funding costs. The bank added that annual profits would grow by 15 %, less than the 17 % anticipated by the market.
The lender was also responsible for the sharp decline in the mid-cap index, where Paragon Group, a specialist mortage lender, fell 6.4% and Bradford & Bingley lost 3.7%.
Other banks followed suit and plunged. Alliance & Leicester was off 2.9%, HBOS declined 2.3% and Lloyds TSB was down 2.1%.
Seven FTSE 100 constituents were trading without further rights to their latest dividend payment. Among them were United Utilities which lost 4 %, Tate & Lyle falling 2.7 % to 568p and Yell Group retreating 2.8 %.
[R]8:30AM Asian markets decline Wednesday with only China bucking the downtrend.[/R]
Asian markets declined Wednesday. The Nikkei 225 Average settled 1.2% lower at 17,849. Toyota Motor Corp., the largest automaker in Japan, lost 1.7%, a record in almost three weeks. Another exporter, which declined was Nikon, down 2.8%. Brokerage houses lost on concern over energy projects in Russia and Venezuela, involving high geopolitical risk. Marubeni declined 3.2%, while Mitsui & Co. shed 3.6%.
Hong Kong Hang Seng Index fell 0.4% to close at 21,705. China Mobile declined 1.6%, and HSBC lost 0.8%. Oil companies also lost. Sinopec declined for a third straight day, 0.7% lower, in the wake of the surprise resignation of its chairman, and Cnooc lost 1.63%.
In South Korea, the Kospi Index lost 0.9% to 1,733. Banks declined on worries of further measures on the side of the central bank to cool down liquidity. Kookmin Bank closed down 1.7% and Korea Exchange Bank fell 3%. Hyundai bucked the trend and rose 2.1%. Australian S&P/ASX 200 plunged 2% to 6,184. Weak commodities weighed on the market with mining company BHP Billiton, down 1.8.
China bucked the trend and advanced on bargain hunting of oversold companies. High-tech company Beijing Centergate Technologies and FAW Car both advanced by the daily limit of 10%. The Shanghai Composite Index rallied 2.7% to end at 4,078.
[R]7:30AM NY-6:30PM Mumbai Sensex ends 70 points lower on weak auto and metal shares.[/R]
The Sensex on BSE finished 70.02 points lower, or 0.48%, at 14,431.06.
The market-breadth turned negative in the latter part of trading. As 1,245 stocks advanced, 1,388 stocks declined and 64 were unchanged. Of the 30 stocks in the Sensex, only 10 advanced, while the rest declined. The turnover on BSE was Rs 4,685 crore, compared to Rs 4,706 crore on Tuesday. On NSE, the turnover was Rs 9,375 crore, slightly lower than Rs 9,557 crore on Tuesday.
Economic news
The rupee declined for the fourth straight day on talks that financial inflows from abroad will shrink after foreign companies had completed buying new shares offers that drew money from overseas. The rupee fell 0.2% to 41.005 against the dollar in morning trading in Mumbai.
Air India Ltd., the biggest carrier overseas, opened freighter operations with two Airbus SAS planes to meet the increasing demand for transporting goods in India, the second-fastest in growth major economy.
Trading highlights
GMR Infrastructure was the most active stock with a turnover of Rs 297 crore followed by India Infoline and new issue Nelcast.
Advancers
It stocks advanced supported by a weaker rupee. Satyam Computers spurted 2.6% to Rs 468, and led the gainers while Wipro advanced 0.2% to Rs 510, TCS gained 0.9% to Rs 1,133 and Infosys Technologies added 0.7% to Rs 1,936. TCS announced on Tuesday, June 26 2007, that it had struck an agreement with Scuderia Ferrari to provide the complete software to the Formula one cars of the Italian carmaker.
Auto stocks traded mixed. Hero Honda advanced 0.9% to Rs 676 and Bajaj Auto gained nearly 0.2% to Rs 2,131. Other gainers included Grasim up 0.3% to Rs 2,503 and Gujarat Ambuja Cements, 0.3% higher to Rs 116.
Decliners
NTPC led the decliners, down 2.1% to Rs 150. Reliance Communications declined 2% to Rs 515 and Reliance Energy lost also 2% to Rs 578. Aluminium and copper large-cap Hindalco Industries declined 0.6% to Rs 170 on a decline in global metal prices on Tuesday, June 26 2007.
Unlike Hero Honda and Bajaj Auto, Tata Motors declined 1.8% to Rs 672 and Maruti Udyog lost 0.7% to Rs 752.
Ranbaxy Laboratories lost 1.4% to Rs 343 and index heavy Reliance Industries lost 0.3% to Rs 1,698. HDFC Bank and Tata Steel lost over 1% each to Rs 1,091 and Rs 596, respectively.
[R]7:30AM European markets decline Wednesday on weak Northern Rock, Sacyr Vallehermoso.[/R]
European markets declined on Wednesday. By mid-day, Frankfurt Xetra Dax fell 0.8% to 7,796.86, the CAC 40 in Paris lost 0.6% to 5,915.36 and London FTSE 100 slid 0.7% to 6,512.1. National benchmarks fell today in all of the 17 western European markets that were open.
Advancers
Banca Popolare di Milano Scrl surged 4.5%. The northern Italian lender failed to approve changes to its company rules that would have allowed the planned takeover of Banca Popolare dell''Emilia Romagna Scrl to take place
Gaz de France, the operator of biggest natural-gas network in Europe, rallied 1.8%. The French government could approve in coming days a long-planned merger between Gaz de France and Suez.
Decliners
Northern Rock plummeted more than 10%. Deutsche Bank AG, the biggest bank in Germany, and Axa SA, the second-largest insurer in Europe, also tracked the decline. Deutsche Bank lost 1.6%. UBS AG, the biggest bank by assets in Europe, declined 1.4%. Axa fell 1.3%, and Allianz, the largest insurer in Europe, dropped 1.6%.
Sacyr Vallehermoso fell 7.4%. The Spanish builder seeking to acquire French competitor Eiffage SA broke stock-market rules in an attempt to take control of the company and must make a fresh takeover bid.
Commodities
Gold for immediate delivery climbed $1.60, or 0.3%, to $642.50 an ounce after earlier trading at $639.50, the lowest since March 14. Silver increased 0.5 cent to $12.255 an ounce.
Platinum declined for a third consecutive day in London on speculation wage talks will avert a strike in South Africa. Platinum for immediate delivery dropped $1, or 0.1%, to $1,266.50 an ounce and palladium rose $1.50, or 0.4%, to $367.50 an ounce.
Crude oil declined, trading below $68 a barrel in New York, on expectations that U.S. gasoline supplies rose for an eighth straight week. Crude oil for August delivery fell to $67.35 a barrel, a decline of 42 cents, in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude oil for August settlement fell as low as $70.01 a barrel, a decline of 16 cents on the ICE Futures exchange in London.
Currencies
The euro slipped Wednesday against the U.S. dollar. The euro declined slightly to $1.3433 in morning trading in Europe, from $1.3456 Tuesday evening. The dollar also rose against the pound, which fell to $1.9942 from US$1.9987. Meanwhile, the dollar fell against the Japanese yen, to 122.58 yen from 123.24 the previous evening.
[R]5:30AM Gold and silver decline Tuesday, wheat rallies, oil and gasoline fall.[/R]
Gold for August delivery shed $7.40 to settle at $647.30 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after plunging to $643.20, the lowest level since mid-January. August silver lost 59.7 cents to $12.280 an ounce, and July platinum dropped $23.40 to $1,268.30 an ounce. On the Nymex, July copper futures declined 8.4 cents to $3.3180 a pound. Other industrial metals also declined. Lead dipped 4% from record highs on the LME. Aluminum lost 0.8% and nickel fell more than 4%.
Energy prices retreated after advancing a day earlier. Crude oil futures for August delivery shed $1.41 to close at $67.77 a barrel on the Nymex, as the Energy Department''s weekly inventory report Wednesday is expected to show increases in crude and gasoline stockpiles. July gasoline futures sank 5.56 cents to finish at $2.2469 a gallon.
Wheat prices rallied back toward 10-year highs on the Chicago Board of Trade on concern about this year''s crop failing to meet demand. July wheat futures rallied 19 cents to close at $6.0850 a bushel on the CBOT. July corn slid 1.25 cent to finish at $3.6150 a bushel, while July soybeans added 2.75 cents to $8.0700 a bushel.
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