Wednesday, December 11, 2024

FTSE 100 Live: Index yo-yoes; House prices set to surge; BAE slumps

Must read

  • FTSE 100 down 6 points
  • House prices to surge
  • Mortgage approvals jump

11.12am: BAE Systems leads stocks lower

BAE Systems PLC (LSE:BA.) led the FTSE 100 lower into late morning, having shed 4.2% to sit at 1,236p.

The drop followed a downgrade by Bank of America analysts to ‘underperform’, according to MarketScreener, with a lower 1,240p price target being set.

Spirax Group PLC also sat among the losers, having reversed slightly on a gain through Thursday.

Anglo American PLC (LSE:AAL) continued to lead risers in the meantime, following an upgrade by Jefferies analysts, followed by IMI PLC (LSE:IMI).

Overall, the FTSE 100 slipped 6 points to 8,274.

10.58am: Black Friday spending jumps – Nationwide

Nationwide has said today’s Black Friday spending is up against last year so far.

Some 1.66 million transactions had been made by nine this morning by Nationwide customers, the lender reported, marking an 11% uptick against last year’s Black Friday.

“Black Friday 2023 was the busiest shopping day on record for Nationwide customers and this year’s Black Friday is shaping up to be even busier,” payment strategy director Mark Nalder said.

“Transactions are 21 per cent higher than a typical Friday as many people use the day to kick start their Christmas shopping.”

10.50am: Clearing houses face some concentration risks in stress test – BoE

The Bank of England has found some vulnerabilities within major clearing houses in a stress test of the UK’s financial system.

ICE Clear Europe Ltd, LCH Ltd and LME Clear Ltd were studied in the latest routine test and showed larger losses than in last year’s simulation.

Though the clearing houses, which facilitate payments between banks, remained resilient, some issues were seen in highly concentrated positions, the Bank of England said.

“The stress test results do not suggest that this is a cause for concern,” deputy governor for financial stability Sarah Breeden said

“But, we continue to monitor CCPs’ (central counterparties’) resources through ongoing data collection and supervision.”

“When we extend the stress test to include the cost of liquidating highly concentrated positions and more conservative assumptions, we identify some potential areas of vulnerability, which we will explore with CCPs as part of our ongoing supervision.”

10.21am: Mortgage approvals at highest in over two years

The number of prospective buyers who had mortgages approved hit its highest level since August 2022 last month thanks to the likes of lower borrowing costs.

According to the Bank of England, some 68,300 mortgages for house buying were approved in October, increasing by 2,200 month on month.

This coincided with a drop in the effective, or actual, interest rate paid on newly drawn mortgages by 15 basis points to 4.61% – its lowest since May 2023.

Net borrowing for mortgages climbed by £0.9 billion to £3.4 billion in the meantime, while overall consumer credit borrowing across the UK slipped from £1.2 billion to £1.1 billion.

“Buyers and sellers are now on tenterhooks to see when the next interest rate cut might materialise,” Bestinvest analyst Alice Haine said.

“Two quarter-point interest rate cuts have eased borrowing costs to some degree, but the chancellor’s spending, borrowing and tax plans are expected to prove inflationary, something that could slow the pace of further interest rate cuts.”

10.05am: Euro inflation as expected

Euro area inflation hit forecasts by increasing to 2.3% in November from a flat 2% in October, according to a flash estimate by Eurostat, the European Union’s statistical office.

Services registered the highest inflation rate among components at 3.9%, marginally lower than October’s 4%, while food, alcohol, and tobacco saw a decrease to 2.8% from 2.9% the previous month.

Energy prices showed notable improvement, recording a less negative inflation rate of 1.9%, up from a negative 4.6% rate in October.

Germany and France both experienced a 2.4% inflation rate, while Italy registered 1.6%.

9.24am: Bitcoin levels out after whipsaw start to week

Bitcoin remained relatively unbudged on Thursday and throughout this morning after encountering a sharp whipsaw session earlier in the week.

The world’s largest cryptocurrency fell a full 6% between Monday and Tuesday before changing course with a 4.2% rally at the mid-week point.

However, after this classic bout of volatility, the BTC/USD pair has settled down at the sub-$96,000 price point.

At the time of writing, the pair was trading at $95,956.

Bitcoin’s levelled performance follows a mammoth post-election bull run for the digital currency.

As president-elect Donald Trump secured a sweeping victory in the US elections on a pro-crypto policy platform, it rocketed to a fresh all-time high of $96,600.

The bulls fell just shy of smashing $100,000 as a bout of profit taking put an end to these jumbo gains.

Back to stocks, the FTSE 100 blue-chip index is currently trading 14 points lower at 8,268.

8.58am: Hopes pinned on Black Friday after retail footfall drop

Retailers have faced a drop in footfall this month, leaving hopes pinned on Black Friday to “jump-start” this year’s seasonal shopping.

Footfall across the sector dropped by 4.5% between October 27 and November 23, the British Retail Consortium reported on Friday.

High streets faced a 3.7% decline, while footfall at retail parks and shopping centres dropped by 1.1% and 6.1% respectively.

BRC head Helen Dickinson noted this year’s later-than-usual Black Friday and low consumer confidence had weighed on the figures.

“This lacklustre footfall performance will have come as a blow for many retailers, who would have been counting on getting early Christmas trading results under their belts before the start of advent,” Andy Sumpter, of analytics firm Sensormatic, added.

“Tipped as one of the top busiest days for store shopping during peak trading [Black Friday] will hopefully jump-start seasonal shopping.”

8.41am: Anglo American jumps on Jefferies upgrade

Anglo American PLC (LSE:AAL) topped risers on the FTSE 100 on Friday morning after being granted a ‘buy’ rating by Jefferies analysts.

Though there were still risks around its restructuring, which has seen Anglo sell off coal and platinum assets, Jefferies said a drop in the shares left good value.

“The company will be well positioned to benefit from a rising copper price and a resilient iron ore price after its restructuring is complete,” analysts said in a note.

“It should have a strong balance sheet and robust cash flow, enabling it to deliver large capital returns.”

Shares were down around 15% since the restructuring was unveiled in May, Jefferies pointed out, but progress since had “been very good”.

Anglo was upgraded from a ‘hold’ as a result, with Jefferies also lifting its share price target from 2,500p to 2,850p.

Shares climbed 2.6% to 2,452p on Friday.

8.23am: Peel Hunt drops as Budget anxieties weigh on results

Peel Hunt Ltd (AIM:PEEL) fell over 2% as trading got underway after signalling uncertainty in the wake of last month’s Budget in interim results.

Performance in its core equity capital markets business improved in the first half, but anxieties surrounding Labour’s Budget stymied progress in the tail end of the period.

“Volumes reduced towards the end of the period given uncertainty around the UK Budget and US election”, said the group.

Revenues grew by 26% year on year to £53.8n million over the half, trickling down to a £1.2 million profit before tax compared to an £800,000 loss previously… Read more

Shares fell 2.1% as trading got underway.

8.10am: Index on front foot early on

London’s blue-chip index moved higher in early trading, overcoming an initial drop as the market opened.

The FTSE 100 was trading up 9 points at 8,291 as a quiet Friday session got underway.

Anglo American PLC (LSE:AAL) led the early risers, up 3.1%, as other miners also gained in line with an increase in commodity prices.

BAE Systems PLC (LSE:BA.) topped the fallers in the meantime, down 1.9%.

8.01am: House prices predicted to surge over coming years – Zoopla

House prices are expected to surge over the coming years on the back of higher-than-expected income growth, property firm Zoopla has reported.

Following growth of 1.5% in the year to October, Zoopla forecast on Friday that prices would increase by 2.5% in 2025 and by 7.5% over the coming three years.

“The housing market has been resilient in the face of higher borrowing costs over the last two years,” Zoopla executive director Richard Donnell commented.

“Higher income growth and lower mortgage rates have helped reset housing affordability faster than many expected over 2024.”

The average house cost £267,200 in October, up by £3,900 year on year, as prices grew across every region of the UK.

The sales pipeline had surged 30% in the meantime, which Zoopla said would translate to a jump in activity early next year, over which 1.15 million completions were anticipated.

“As we are approaching the end of the year, we are already seeing more buyers entering the market which is not typical for this time of year,” Matt Thompson, sales head at estate agency Chestertons, said.

He added an uplift to stamp duty due next April had in part driven activity, while falling mortgage rates had helped to boost buyer confidence.

7.47am: Hybrid car ban could be delayed as EV demand underwhelms

Britain’s ban on hybrid car sales may be pushed back as ministers and carmakers clash over rules designed to phase out petrol and diesel models in the coming years.

Britain’s Labour government has previously pledged to restore the deadline for polluting car sales, including hybrids, to 2030 after the Conservatives delayed the date to 2035.

However, following pressure as the industry grapples to meet electric vehicle sales targets against lacklustre demand, ministers are reportedly mulling re-delaying the ban on hybrids.

“That would be our preference,” a government source told LBC when quizzed on the move, “there is going to be a need for us to take some political risks to make this work”.

Business secretary Jonathan Reynolds earlier this week said a “fast track” consultation would be held on Britain’s EV mandate, which means 22% of cars sold this year have to be electrics, before the figure increases annually.

It comes after industry figures on Thursday showed car production slumped by over 15% last month as firms grappled to avoid fines by missing the target… Read more

Trade body the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) reported on Thursday that car production in the UK had slumped by over 15% last month.

New zero emission products were “under intense pressure,” boss Mike Hawes had said, as British manufacturers struggled with “the toughest [EV] targets”.

One option reportedly under consideration by the government is to freeze the 22% EV sales target into next year, when carmakers are set to risk fines if 28% of volumes are not electrics.

7.12am: Stocks to fall back

Futures had the FTSE 100 moving 18 points lower to 8,291 on Friday morning, following a six-point gain in a quiet session on Thursday.

Spirax Group PLC had led gains on Thursday, followed by the likes of Admiral PLC on read across from Aviva PLC (LSE:AV.)’s rejected £3.3 billion bid for Direct Line Insurance Group PLC (LSE:DLG).

Overnight, Asian markets faced a mixed showing, with China’s Shenzhen up 1.7% and the biggest riser as a result.

Back in London, consumer credit figures from the Bank of England were among releases due on Friday, while a string of inflation data was expected from Europe.

5.00am: Consumer credit, mortgage approvals and Peel Hunt in focus

Bank of England consumer credit data is due on Friday, alongside mortgage approvals figures, while Peel Hunt will report interim figures.

Announcements due: 

Interim results: Northern Bear PLC, Peel Hunt Ltd (AIM:PEEL)

AGMs: Aptamer Group PLC, Arc Minerals Ltd, Atlantic Lithium Ltd, Europa Oil & Gas Holdings, Mosman Oil & Gas Ltd, Sylvania Platinum Ltd 

Economic announcements: BoE Consumer Credit (UK), Mortgage Approvals (UK), Inflation (EU) 

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