Energy stocks are however on the up today with the likes of BG Group (+1.46%) and Shell (+0.94%) rising on the premise that we may be seeing some stability in oil prices. There is much speculation that oil will retake the $60/bbl level and then some. Shell already divulged a massive loss last week due to write offs in Alaska and Canada and looks to reduce costs by come $11bn. The merger between the two companies looks shaky while oil prices are at present levels, nevertheless Shell is gung-ho about the takeover and has today announced plans to make the deal work as long as the oil price continues to
recover.
UK house builders despite gaining a stamp of approval yesterday from JP Morgan are under pressure this morning following a ratings cut from Liberum. The spectre of the UK QIR this Thursday and the potential for a more hawkish outlook is likely also weighing here to some extent. UK construction PMI took its cues from yesterday’s manufacturing survey and managed to stay on an even keel at 58.8.
Barratt Developments: -2.95%
Taylor Wimpey -2.12%
Persimmon – 1.37%
DIY firm Kingfisher is also lower (-0.93% )is lower as a result too.
Weir Group (+5.95%) The stock recently dived to lows last seen in February 2010. It has suffered from reduced activity in the North American oil and gas sector, as it reported 29 per cent year-on-year fall in third quarter group order input. Weir is set to take measures to address and support profitability and sees FY results in line with market views but the outlook is challenging. Q4 likely to see further declines in oil and gas activity. Average broker price target is 1316p
Standard Chartered (-6.32%) plans to cut 15,000 jobs and raise £3.3bn in a rights issue as CEO Winters struggles to revive a lender that halved in value over the past two years. Revenue was down 18.4pc to $3.68bn and impairment losses increased from $536m to $1.23bn for the quarter. The bank pledged cost savings of $2.9bn by 2018 and said it will restructure or exit $100bn of assets. A move to a more profitable and less capital intensive business is what the company seeks. The fact that the bank is now facing new probes on suspected anti-money laundering breaches is also weighing on the stock today.
Aberdeen Asset Management +1.24% Standard Chartered’s second largest shareholder. The CEO has stated this morning that he is supportive of the StanChart strategy.
ABF (-1.19%) At least it’s still paying a dividend but adjusted pre-tax profits were down 6 to £1.03bn and earnings per share fell to 102p. Current headwinds and food commodity deflation have been blamed for the fall in revenue.
We are calling the Dow lower by 38 points to 17790.