UK stocks drifted into negative territory Monday lunchtime despite gains in oil stocks and a rebound in cyber security firm Darktrace (DARK), which gained 10.5% to 638p.
Brent crude futures firmed 0.8% to $83.30 per barrel after OPEC rejected US calls for it to step up production, while sterling was flat against the dollar at $1.3490 and gold crept 0.2% higher to $1,817 per ounce.
At midday, the FTSE 100 index of leading shares was down 0.1% to 7,295 points.
COMPANY NEWS
Shares in mining group BHP (BHP) dipped 0.5% to £18.99 after the firm announced it had agreed to sell its 80% stake in BHP Mitsui Coal, a joint venture metallurgical coal project in Australia, to Singapore-owned Stanmore Resources for up to $1.35 billion.
Asset manager Abrdn (ABDN) confirmed press reports it was in talks to acquire online retail investment platform Interactive Investors for more than £1.5 billion.
The asset manager is believed to have £2 billion of surplus regulatory capital after selling off non-core assets and a deal would head of II’s preparations to float on the market independently. Abrdn shares gained 3% to 263.6p.
Online gambling software provider Playtech (PTEC) confirmed media chat it had received a preliminary approach from Chinese private equity firm Gopher Investments just days after agreeing a 680p per share offer from Australia’s Aristocrat Leisure. The shares climbed another 2.4% to 725p, extending their recent rally.
Shares in investor favourite Scottish Mortgage (SMT) eased 1% to £15.14 despite the company posting a 16% increase in first half net asset value against a 9% gain for the FTSE All-World Index and raised its interim dividend by 5% to 1.52p per share.
Defence contractor BAE Systems (BA.) released a positive trading update, confirming its full year sales and EBIT growth forecasts thanks to a solid backlog of orders and a growing pipeline of opportunities. The shares dipped 0.2% to 572.8p.
Shares in building materials supplier Kingspan (KGP) fell 1.7% to €100 after the firm flagged ‘extraordinary’ cost inflation in its insulated panels business and a slowdown in orders since August. The company also said activity at its Light & Air business was ‘more subdued than in other categories’.
SMALL- AND MID-CAP NEWS
Shares in Angling Direct (ANG:AIM) dropped 1.5% to 68p after the firm reported its websites had been affected by a cyber-attack late on Friday which also affected some of its social media accounts.
The company said it was working ‘round the clock’ to bring the websites back online while its 39 UK stores remained open and continued to trade.
Cream-cake purveyor Cake Box (CBOX:AIM) reported revenues up more than 90% for the first half to September and pre-tax profits up more than 120%, sending its shares 4.5% higher to 397p.
The company said it had seen no supply chain disruption to its operations and was rolling out new franchise stores and kiosks as planned.
Shares in funeral director Dignity (DTY) drifted 2.4% lower to 702p after the firm posted a rise of just 1% in turnover for the three months to September and a 10% drop in operating profits as it continued to see a fall in market share in both funerals and crematoria.
Logistics provider DX Group (DX.) lost 0.3% to 31.7p as it reported a 266% jump in full year underlying trading profit thanks to a 16% rise in revenues driven by its freight business. The firm also said it would reinstate its dividend as soon as possible.
Shares in bus and rail operator Go-Ahead Group (GOG) slid 3.2% to 789.5p after it reported a slight slowdown in the recovery of passenger volumes on its regional bus network, although its other bus and rail businesses continued to perform in line with expectations.
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