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DAILY STOCKMARKET REPORT 12 March 2010

 

FTSE 100

5617.26, -23.31

Dow

10611.84, +44.51

FTSE 250

9854.44, -10.85

Nasdaq

2368.46, +9.51

FTSE All Share

2871.68, -10.4

S&P 500

1150.24, +4.63

Nikkei

10751.26,+86.31

Hang Seng

21209.74, -18.46

Oil (Crude)

$82.11, +$0.02

Gold

$1108.20, +$0.10

Base Rate

0.5%

10 Yr Gilt

4.15%

£/$

1.511

£/€

1.1025

1 month LIBOR

0.543

3 month LIBOR

0.644

 

Markets

London - The FTSE 100 fell 23.31 points to close at 5,617.26 yesterday. Heavily weighted mining companies’ dragged stocks lower as base metal prices fell. Home Retail helped to limit declines after forecasting earnings ahead of analysts’ expectations. Thomas Cook was the biggest percentage riser after saying at an investor presentation that it can achieve an operating profit margin of 5.5% to 6% over the next three to five years. This morning the index is 2.86 points higher at 5,620.12.

New York - US indices finished higher yesterday, following a late rally in financials. The Dow Jones gained 44.51 points to 10,611.84, the S&P 500 added 4.63 points to 1,150.24 and the Nasdaq rose 2,368.46.

Economic news was mixed with the Labour Department reporting the number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment fell to 462,000 from a revised 468,000. Continuing claims, a measure of Americans who have been receiving unemployment checks for a week or more, rose to 4,558,000, up 37,000. The January trade gap narrowed to $37.3 billion from a revised reading of $39.9 billion. The deficit was expected to widen to $41 billion, according to forecasts. Citigroup led banks higher after Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit said the bailed-out bank should be consistently profitable.

Tokyo - The Nikkei climbed 86.31 points to close at 10,751.26 this morning, on optimism the yen will weaken further amid speculation the central bank will loosed monetary policies.

Hong Kong - The Hang Seng slipped 18.46 points to 21,209.74. China Construction Bank Corp slid after saying it is considering refinancing. HSBC Holdings fell after Goldman Sachs cut the stock from Buy to Neutral.

 Economics

US Retail sales (Feb) 13:30 GMT/ 08:30 EST

Beige Book comments suggest that retail sales were reasonably firm up until the snowstorms hit, but that the blizzards affected activity in a number of areas. Auto sales results appear to show a similar dynamic, and analysts know that unit auto sales fell 4.1%. Analysts expect a combination of weaker auto sales, lower gasoline prices, and bad weather to weigh fairly heavily on sales results, with total retail sales down 0.4% and ex-autos sales down 0.2%. Sales excluding autos and gasoline could be a bit less negative, coming in at -0.1%.

US University of Michigan confidence (Mar, preliminary) 14:55 GMT/ 09:55 EST

February’s 10pts plunge in the Conference Board measure of consumer confidence has not yet been followed by further downward momentum in other sentiment readings (such as the final University of Michigan index or the weekly ABC News survey). The latest Beige Book actually showed some signs of consumer resilience, with sales holding up prior to the mid-February snow storm. Analysts look for March Michigan sentiment to remain steady at 73.5.

US Business inventories (Jan) 15:00 GMT/ 10:00 EST

Analysts know manufacturing inventories rose 0.2% in January. Assuming flat wholesale inventories (not available at the time of writing) and a 0.2% increase in retail inventories, analysts expect total business inventories to rise 0.1%.

Corporate

Old Mutual PLC said that it is planning to partially list its U.S. asset-management arm and dispose of its U.S. life-insurance business as the financial-services conglomerate reported a 3% rise in operating profit due to a rise in contributions from its long-term savings business. The listing and disposal are part of a bigger restructuring plan, which includes exiting from markets or businesses that can’t meet a 15% target return on equity. The London-based company, with insurance, banking and asset-management businesses in 35 countries, has said that it is "in too many geographies and too many lines of businesses." If successful, the restructuring plan could gives proceeds that would cut GBP 1.5 billion, or two-thirds, off Old Mutual’s massive GBP 2.273 billion debt.   Old Mutual, which has a focus on South Africa, said operating profit rose to GBP 1.17 billion from GBP 1.136 billion a year earlier as profitability from the long-term savings business improved. In a briefing, Chief Executive Julian Roberts said Old Mutual will keep a majority stake in the partial listing of the U.S. asset-management business, planned within the next three years. "We will absolutely keep a significant majority stake. This is just a partial minority IPO. I’m absolutely committed to this business. We think we’ve got a good business but we can improve it and structure it better," Mr. Roberts said, adding the IPO won’t take place this year. "It’s not a 2010 thing. . . . It will be in the three-year cycle that we’re looking at," he said.


The above details are provided for information only and are not intended to be construed as solicitation for the sale or purchase of any particular investment nor as specific investment advice.

 

Dominic Key, Lupton Fawcett LLP

If you would like to make a comment to be published about this article, please do so below. Alternatively, if you would like to discuss this article with Dominic you can call him on 0113 280 2037 or write to him at dominic.key@luptonfawcett.com or visit http://www.luptonfawcett.com/amd/ for further details.
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