Proactive Investors -
11.04am: Entain (LON:ENT) regains after gambling rule hit
Entain PLC (LSE:ENT) sat among the FTSE 100’s risers on Thursday morning as shares looked to be in recovery mode after falling as new UK gambling rules were announced on Wednesday.
Shares ticked up 2.5% on Thursday, having dropped on Wednesday as news broke the Department for Culture, Media and Sport would hit the industry with new measures.
A £5 per spin limit is set to apply to those aged 25 and over under the rules, with 18 to 24-year-olds restricted to £2 stakes.
A statutory levy on firms to help fund gambling addiction was also set to be introduced.
10.27am: Renewi soars as takeover agreed with Macquarie
Waste management firm Renewi PLC (LSE:RWI) has surged 43.5% after firming up a £700.9 million takeover agreement with Australia’s Macquarie.
Renewi said on Thursday that Macquarie had offered 870p a share, representing a 57% premium to its closing price on Wednesday.
Macquarie, which previously owed crisis-struck Thames Water, had walked away over a year ago after an 810p per share offer was rejected.
10.10am: Oil picks up as OPEC meeting delayed
Oil prices spiked on Thursday morning, coinciding with news the OPEC+ cartel had pushed back its latest meeting into next week.
Benchmark Brent crude moved as high as US$73.19 a barrel, having been as low as US$72.42 earlier on in the morning.
OPEC said that its meeting scheduled for Sunday would now take place next Thursday in order to avoid conflicting with another event.
Eyes have been on the cartel and whether it will continue to delay output cuts in the meeting as speculation mounts over a supply glut next year.
9.43am: Tesco (LON:TSCO), Sainsbury’s dealt double upgrades by JP Morgan
Tesco PLC (OTC:TSCDY) (LSE:TSCO) and J Sainsbury PLC (LSE:LON:SBRY) racked up gains on Thursday thanks to a double upgrade by JP Morgan brokers.
Both were lifted from ‘underweight’ to ‘overweight’ by the bank in a note, which highlighted upside in the UK’s food retail sector.
“Our view into 2025 is more balanced and varies by market,” JP Morgan said.
“In particular [we are] more constructive on the UK, while we believe that the EU food retail sector will move into stock-picker territory.”
Tesco and Sainsbury both offered “upside risk” moving into next year, analysts added.
B&M European Value Retail SA (LSE:BME) was also highlighted for potential “over-earning,” though JP Morgan noted this was on lower expectations relative to consensus.
Sainsbury’s and Tesco gained 2.8% and 2.4% respectively on Thursday, as B&M climbed by 1.2%.
9.23am: French stocks in recovery mode after budget fears
French stocks gained over the course of the morning, having stooped to their lowest since August on Wednesday as fears swirled around a political crisis.
France’s CAC ticked up 0.6% on Thursday after the country's finance minister said the government could make concessions to push through its budget.
Fears have mounted over the government’s collapse were the budget, over which negotiations have taken place with Marine Le Pen's right-wing party Rassemblement National, not passed.
9.13am: Admiral leads FTSE 100 higher
The FTSE 100 held gains into Thursday morning, having climbed by 18 points to 8,292.
Admiral Group (LON:ADML) PLC led the way among risers thanks to read across from Aviva PLC (LSE:LON:AV.)’s rejected £3.3 billion bid for Direct Line Insurance Group PLC (LON:DLGD) (LSE:DLG).
Spirax (LON:SPX) Group PLC followed on bullish commentary from brokers, including Citi which initiated coverage of the engineering firm with a ‘buy’ rating.
JD Sports Fashion PLC (LSE:LON:JD.), Tesco PLC (LSE:TSCO) and J Sainsbury PLC (LSE:SBRY) were also among the early risers.
Aviva PLC (LSE:AV.) led fallers in the meantime as investors mulled its rejected bid for Direct Line.
8.55am: Consumer confidence under pressure in run-up to Christmas
Consumer confidence has remained under pressure since last month’s Budget as concerns have built around the economy in the run-up to Christmas.
According to the British Retail Consortium, consumers' views on the economy deteriorated between October and November, with its tracker declining from -17 to -19.
Outlook on personal finances barely changed in the meantime, moving from -4 to -3, the retail body found.
“There was little shift in consumer confidence since the Chancellor’s Budget, with many worried about the economy in the lead-up to Christmas,” BRC head Helen Dickinson said.
“Personal retail spending remained positive,” she highlighted, pointing to an increase from +2 to +3, “though this was to be expected as consumers prepare for the festive season”.
“The last month clearly did little to shift the dial for households either positively or negatively,” Dickinson added.
“However, the same cannot be said for the retail industry. With over £7 billion in additional costs in 2025 resulting from the Budget, retailers will have little choice but to raise prices or reduce investment in jobs and shops.”
8.36am: Direct Line, Loungers in demand after takeover bids
Direct Line Insurance Group PLC (LSE:DLG) and Loungers PLC (AIM:LGRS) shares were in demand on Thursday morning after news broke of respective takeover bids for each.
Direct Line shot up 37.2% after it said on Wednesday evening that a £3.3 billion advance from Aviva PLC (LSE:AV.) had been rejected.
It had dubbed the bid “highly opportunistic” and argued it “substantially undervalued the company”... Read more
Loungers gained 28.4% in the meantime on news it had accepted a 310p per share bid from US private equity firm Fortress Investment Group, valuing the bar operator at £338 million… Read more
8.17am: Dr Martens (LON:DOCS) soars despite swinging to loss
Dr Martens PLC (LSE:DOCS) jumped 14.2% as trading got underway on Thursday, despite unveiling a pre-tax loss and slump in sales for the first half.
Revenues declined 18% year-on-year to £325 million, in line with expectations, while a £29 million pre-tax loss was recorded, against last year’s £26 million profit.
Dr Martens also confirmed Ije Nwokorie would replace Kenny Wilson as chief executive in January, alongside laying out a plan to return its US business to growth... Read more
8.13am: FTSE 100 opens on front foot
London’s blue chip index kicked off the day in positive fashion, ticking up 13 points to 8,288 as trading got underway.
Tesco PLC (LSE:TSCO), J Sainsbury PLC (LSE:SBRY), Admiral PLC and Spirax Group PLC were among the early risers, while Imperial Brands PLC (LSE:LON:IMB) led fallers at the open.
8.07am: Ocado eyes capacity boost as partner Morrisons reshuffles distribution
Ocado Group PLC (LSE:LON:OCDO) has laid out plans to boost capacity through a deal with Morrisons.
Morrisons, a partner since 2013, will no longer take deliveries from its Erith distribution centre.
Morrisons will rather build volumes from Ocado’s Dordon distribution site and expand use of the grocery technology firm’s artificial intelligence-powered online network.
“As Ocado Retail moves towards full utilisation of existing capacity, this decision enables a helpful option to provide it with further short-term growth, without an expectation for additional capex,” Ocado chief executive Tim Steiner commented in a statement... Read more
7.46am: THG (LON:THG) firms up Ingenuity demerger plan
THG PLC (LSE:THG) has told investors of plans for the demerger of its Ingenuity digital and logistics arm.
Ingenuity would be separated into a private company under the move, leaving THG’s core business comprising of its beauty and nutrition wings, a statement said on Thursday.
“It is expected that [the remaining business] would be capable of optimising returns to its shareholders instead of reinvesting profits and cash flow into Ingenuity’s technology capital expenditure requirements,” THG said... Read more
7.19am: UK car production slumps
The number of cars produced in the UK last month dropped by 15.3% year on year as manufacturers grappled with requirements to make up sales with electrics.
Some 77,484 cars rolled off production lines in October, 14,037 fewer than the same month last year, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).
Export volumes dropped 17.6%, while the number of cars built for domestic use fell 4.7%.
Car makers are required to make up 22% of sales with electric vehicles this year, but have heavily criticised the mandate given lacklustre demand.
“These are deeply concerning times for the automotive industry, with massive investments in plants and new zero-emission products under intense pressure,” SMMT boss Mike Hawes said.
“Slowdowns in the global market - especially for EVs - are impacting production output, with the situation in the UK particularly acute given we have arguably the toughest targets and most accelerated timeline but without the consumer incentives necessary to drive demand.”
7.11am: Stocks seen higher
Futures had the FTSE 100 edging up by nine points to 8,303 ahead of Thursday’s open and building on a 16-point gain on Wednesday.
Following a calm day of trading, Thursday was set to bring another quieter day, with Dr Martens among the few big names reporting.
Overnight, Asian markets were mixed as Chinese stocks fell and Japan’s Nikkei saw the largest gain. Wall Street had faced declines beforehand.
Back in London, attention was on car production data from the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders, which showed an eighth successive monthly drop.
5.00am: Dr Martens' results in focus
Thursday brings a quieter schedule on the company front, with Dr Martens' interim results set to be in focus.
Dr Martens is expected to have fallen into loss-making territory... Read more
US stock markets will be closed as traders are given a Thanksgiving holiday, which will reduce market trading volumes in Europe too.
Announcements due:
Interims: Foresight Group Holdings Ltd, Theracryf PLC, TPXimpact Holdings PLC (AIM:TPX), Dr Martens PLC (LSE:DOCS)
Finals: Impax (LON:IEM) Asset Management Group
AGMs: Argent BioPharma Ltd, Castillo Copper Ltd, EnSilica PLC, Galliford Try (LON:GFRD) Holdings PLC, London Finance & Investment Group PLC, SLF Realisation Fund Limited, Thor Energy PLC (LON:THRL), Zentra Group
FTSE 100 ex-dividends to reduce index by: 13.5
Economic announcements: Car Production (UK), Economic Sentiment (EU), Consumer Confidence (EU), Consumer Inflation Expectations (EU), Industrial Sentiment (EU)