FTSE News: FTSE 100, FTSE 250, and FTSE 400 investment news
FTSE market news from the London Stock Exchange: FTSE 100, FTSE 250, and FTSE 400

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  • Miners gain, house builders see declines

  • Oil, miners higher in London

  • Telecoms, retailers see gains

  • Pharma lower in London

  • British Energy drops on nuclear plant delays

  • Home builders see gains in London

  • House builders, property developers down in London

  • Brewers higher on bids rumors

  • Oil sector, banks mixed in London

  • BP, Royal Dutch Shell gain on higher oil prices

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    October 11, 2007

    Commodities-related companies higher on session

    Filed under: Companies, Northern Rock, BG Group, Tullow Oil, Aquarius Platinum, Randgold, Vedanta Resources, Bellway, Bovis Homes Group, Persimmon, Barratt Developments, Hunting, Redrow, Taylor Wimpey

    In London on Thursday, the FTSE 100 was 1.38 percent higher to 6,724.5 while the FTSE 250 gained 0.96 percent to 11,622.9.

    Commodities-related shares were higher on the session.

    Vedanta Resources (LSE: VED) had the best day on the 100 as it added 5.8 percent to £23.17, while oil refiner and distributor Hunting (LSE: HTG) was the best performer on the 250 with a gain of 10.28 percent to 783p.

    Elsewhere among miners, gold miner Randgold (LSE: RSS; NAS: GOLD) was 7.43 percent higher to £17.35 and Aquarius Platinum (LSE: AQP; ASX: AQP; JSE: AQP) jumped 9.42 percent to £18.47.

    Back in the oil sector, Tullow Oil (LSE: TLW; OTC: TUWLY) was up 4.68 percent to 626.5p, while BG Group (LSE: BG; NYSE: BG) added 4.74 percent to 883p.

    Among banks, Northern Rock (LSE: NRK) slipped again, dropping 5.67 percent to 258p for the worst performance of the session on the 100.

    Meanwhile, the house building sector and property developers had a bad day after the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors reported that house prices were lower in the UK again in September.

    Bovis Homes (LSE: BVS) was down 2.56 percent to 684p and Bellway (LSE: BWY) dropped 2.89 percent to £10.76.

    Barratt Developments (LSE: BDEV) was 3.54 percent lower to 722p, Persimmon (LSE: PSN) fell 4.02 percent to £10.03 and Redrow (LSE: RDW) was down 4.31 percent to 388.5p.

    Taylor Wimpey (LSE: TW) fell 4.28 percent to 290.75p.





    September 14, 2007

    Northern Rock in 31.46 percent decline

    Filed under: Companies, Paragon, Northern Rock, Burren Energy, Reckitt Benckiser, Bradford & Bingley, Alliance & Leicester, Dana Petroleum, JKX Oil & Gas, Bellway, Persimmon, Kingfisher, Barratt Developments, Reed Elsevier, Hochschild

    London’s equities markets saw declines on Friday.

    The FTSE 100 1.17 percent lower to 6,289.3 and the FTSE 250 falling 1.95 percent to 10,954.

    Northern Rock (LSE: NRK) had the worst performance by far on the 100, falling 31.46 percent to 438p after it had to ask the Bank of England for help after it could not find a place to borrow money from traditional sources and customers lined up outside branches of the bank to withdraw their money from accounts.

    The trouble extended to other banks, with Alliance & Leicester (LSE: AL) dropping 6.88 percent to 873p.

    Mortgage lenders were also hurt.

    Paragon (LSE: PAG) was down 16.76 percent to 298p for the worst day on the 250.

    It was followed by fellow mortgage lender Bradford & Bingley (LSE: BB), which was 7.7 percent lower to 329.75.

    Homebuilders were also lower on the day.

    Barratt Developments (LSE: BDEV) dropped 4.71 percent to 829p and Persimmon (LSE: PSN) was down 6.62 percent to £10.16 on the 250, while Bellway (LSE: BWY) fell 7.54 percent to £10.67 on the 100.

    Oil-related shares saw gains on the 250.

    Burren Energy (LSE: BUR) was up 1.79 percent to 853p, while Dana Petroleum (LSE: DNX) added 1.94 percent to £10 and JKX Oil & Gas (LSE: JKX) was 2.25 percent higher to 397.75p.

    Gold miner Hochschild (LSE: HOC) had the best day on the 250 as it gained 3.83 percent to 345.25p.

    Chemicals group Reckitt Benckiser (LSE: RB) was the best performer on the 100, adding 1.49 percent to £27.99.

    Publisher Reed Elsevier (LSE: REL; Euronext: REN; NYSE: ENL; NYSE: RUK) was 1.08 percent higher to 608p, and DIY retailer Kingfisher (LSE: KFG) closed at 196.6p, a gain of 0.2 percent.





    August 15, 2006

    Shire gains on lawsuit settlement

    Filed under: Companies, Shire, Amvescap, Carphone Warehouse, Bellway, Bovis Homes Group, Man Group, Barratt Developments

    The London equities markets had another slow day, with only 2.3 billion shares traded. Still, both the FTSE 100 and FTSE 250 saw gains on the day. The 100 added 0.5 percent to 5,897.9, while the 250 was 0.6 percent higher to 9,359.6.

    In the pharmaceuticals sector, Shire was 0.7 percent higher to 888p on the news that it has reached a settlement with Barr Laboratories that will keep Barr from marketing a generic version of Shire’s attention deficit disorder drug Adderrall until 2009. Adderrall accounts for about 50 percent of Shire’s sales.

    Homebuilders were also up on the session as rumors of consolidation within the sector circulated. Bellway gained 1.8 percent to £11.95, while Barratt Developments added 2.3 percent to 951½p and Bovis Homes was 2.4 percent higher to 811p.

    In the telecommunications sector, Carphone Warehouse advanced by 3 percent to 263¾p amid rumors that a private equity company had offered 330p per share for the company.

    Man Group was 2.2 percent higher to 415p, while Amvescap added 2.3 percent to 517½p as fund managers benefited from the notion that weaker than expected data out of the United States would make it more likely that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates at their current level rather than increasing them at its next meeting.





    August 3, 2006

    Homebuilders decline

    Filed under: Companies, Northern Rock, ITV, PartyGaming, British Land, Alliance & Leicester, Wm Morrison, Hammerson, HBOS, Bellway, Persimmon, Barratt Developments, Liberty International, Rightmove, Countrywide

    London equities markets were sharply lower on Thursday after the Bank of England announced that it had raised interest rates in the UK by a quarter of a percent to 4.75 percent. Most analysts had not expected the rate hike to come at this time. With 3.2 billion shares changing hands, the FTSE 100 dropped 1.6 percent to close at 5,838.4 and the FTSE 250 was 1.4 percent lower, ending the session at 9,264.3.

    Sectors most seriously affected by the rate hike included mortgage banks, homebuilders, and those companies that market homes and land. Among homebuilders, Persimmon was 4 percent lower to £12.42, while Bellway fell 4.3 percent to £11.65 and Barratt Developments dropped 5.1 percent to 945p.

    Among those engaged in selling property, Hammerson declined by 3 percent to £12.36, British Land was 3.9 percent lower to £13.24, and Liberty International fell by 4.3 percent to £11.04. Estate agents were also lower. Rightmove dropped 5.8 percent to 270p, while Countrywide fell 8.1 percent to 387p.

    In the banking sector, mortgage banks declined on the theory that higher interest rates would mean higher house payments and the possibility that more people would not be able to meet their debts. Northern Rock was down by 1.6 percent to £10.88, while HBOS fell 3 percent to 959p and Alliance & Leicester dropped 3.5 percent to 955p.

    There were advances on the day, but they were few and far between. PartyGaming added 0.5 percent to 110p on the news that it has bought internet sports betting company Gamebookers. Broadcaster ITV gained 2.7 percent to 104¼p after adding nearly 5 percent on Wednesday. Wm Morrison was 3.5 percent higher to 213p on higher sales. Citigroup raised the supermarket chain’s target share price from 215p to 240p and reconfirmed it’s “buy” recommendation.





    April 25, 2006

    London markets mixed

    Filed under: Companies, Cairn Energy, ITV, Corus, Bellway, Greene King

    The London equities markets were mixed on Tuesday as the FTSE 100 was hurt by a declining oil sector but the FTSE 250 was helped out by bid rumors in the homebuilding sector. The 100 dropped 0.2 percent to 6,086.6, while the 250 added 0.1 percent to 9,966.9.

    Oil exploration company Cairn Energy was down 2 percent to £23.70 on lower oil prices and talk that the company’s directors had been selling their own shares in the company in order to profit from the company’s recent advances. Cairn has added 23 percent to its share price since the beginning of the year.

    In the homebuilding sector, Bellway was said to be especially attractive to possible bidders with one of the lowest share prices in the sector. Bellway added 0.4 percent on the day to £11.91.

    Still in mergers and acquisitions, broadcaster ITV was rumored to be about to receive an offer from Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, a private equity group. ITV was up 1.3 percent to 116p. Takeover speculation also surrounded pubs group Greene King, which lost 0.8 percent on the day to 755½p. Entrepreneur Michael Cannon was said to be interested.

    In the steel sector, Corus was up 1.1 percent to 88¼p as Citigroup reiterated its “buy” recommendation and upped its target share price from 90p to 100p.





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