Markets Print 2020-04-17

UK markets steady

Britain's stock markets steadied on Thursday after a two-day slump as budget airline EasyJet signalled it would ride out the coronavirus-induced travel halt, but broader concerns that a lockdown would be extended pressured the FTSE 100.
Published 17 Apr, 2020 12:00am

Britain's stock markets steadied on Thursday after a two-day slump as budget airline EasyJet signalled it would ride out the coronavirus-induced travel halt, but broader concerns that a lockdown would be extended pressured the FTSE 100.

The blue-chip index fell 0.2% after opening up about 0.8%, with autos, insurers and energy stocks leading declines as worsening economic figures dented risk appetite.

Travel and leisure stocks were a bright spot, recovering about 0.8% as EasyJet said it would stay cash positive even if its fleet was grounded for nine months.

Its shares jumped 2%, while cruise operator Carnival Plc and IAG-owned British Airways added between 4.7% and 5.4%, respectively. The mid-cap index was flat following a 6.5% fall in the past two days.

Britain's stock markets have also lagged a broader European rally, with the STOXX 600 rising for six of the past seven sessions on signs the pandemic was plateauing in some of the hardest hit parts of the continent.

Among other British stocks, pest control company Rentokil Initial rose 3% after saying it was pushing ahead with staff layoffs and a 35% cut in board members pay as it braces for a bigger hit to operations in the second quarter.

Asset manager Schroders gained 2.4% after it reported net new business of 30.4 billion pounds due to an influx of assets from the Scottish Widows investment mandate, offsetting a fall in total assets in first quarter.

Oilfield services provider Petrofac plunged 15.5% as Abu Dhabi National Oil Company terminated $1.65-billion worth of contracts it had awarded to its Emirati unit.

Cybersecurity firm Avast jumped 9.5% after it stuck to its 2020 revenue outlook. "The UK has not been a particularly great market this year for global managers to be overweight," said Steven Holden, chief executive of Copley Fund Research in Auckland, New Zealand. "What you're now seeing is some of the overweight position being brought down."

Latest data showed British retail spending slumped 27% in the first two weeks of the lockdown and the figures are likely to worsen with the government expected to extend the lockdown for a further three weeks on Thursday.

Copyright Reuters, 2020

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