A combination of hopes for further US fiscal stimulus and signs that the government was shying away from a new national lockdown helped lift UK stocks in late morning trade.

At lunchtime the FTSE 100 index was up 0.9% to 5,917, homing back in on the psychologically-important 6,000-point level again thanks to strength in materials stocks such as DS Smith (SMDS), Mondi (MNDI) and Smurfit Kappa (SKG) and a broad rally in utilities.

WINNERS

Among the major gainers, motoring and cycling products and services group Halfords (HFD) accelerated 20% to 219p after upgrading its first-half outlook on profit amid stronger than forecast sales.

First-half pre-tax profit is now expected to be in excess of £55 million compared with recent guidance of £35 million to £40 million thanks to continued momentum in cycling and motoring products and services.

Shares in litigation finance provider Burford Capital (BUR:AIM) gained 16% to 726p as realisations from its investments during the half-year to June came in well ahead of market expectations.

Importantly there was no contribution from Burford’s biggest case, the Petersen claim against the controversial 2012 nationalisation of Argentinian oil company YPF, showing the capacity of the firm’s broader portfolio to generate significant capital gains.

AIM-listed document storage and security firm Restore (RST:AIM) jumped 8% to 345p after it reported a ‘significant’ jump in revenues and profitability in the third quarter compared with the second quarter thanks to increased client demand, market share gains and new business wins.

Shares in financial services company Standard Life Aberdeen (SLA) rose 3.2% to 233p following the news it would extend its share buyback programme until the end of January. The company repurchased £279 million worth of shares between 19 February and 30 September 2020.

Medical technology group Smith & Nephew (SN.) edged up 2% to £15.46 as it forecast a 4% decline in underlying revenue for the third quarter of 2020, marking a significant improvement in momentum since the second quarter when underlying revenues fell 29%.

Foreign exchange risk management and payments company Alpha FX (AFX) upgraded its full-year performance expectations, forecasting earnings in line with last year as 'strong' performance in July and August continued into September. Shares were up 1.4% to £10.90.

LOSERS

Aerospace engineering firm Rolls-Royce (RR.) was the heaviest faller, losing 10% to 117p after it announced plans to raise around £2 billion through a fully underwritten 10 for 3 rights issue aimed at improving liquidity and reducing balance sheet leverage.

The firm also plans to raise a further £1 billion through debt issuance 'in the near future', and has agreed a new two-year loan facility of £1 billion conditional on the success of the rights issue. However, shares are down over 80% so far this year.

Soft drinks maker Britvic (BVIC) said it had completed the sale of its juice assets in France to Refresco. The sale included three juice manufacturing sites, related private label juice business and the Fruite brand. Investors shrugged off the news however, sending the shares down 3.9% to 789p.

Home improvement retailer Kingfisher (KGF) completed the sale of Castorama Russia to Maxidom, a home improvement company in Russia, for RUB 7.4 billion or about £73 million. Again, investors seemed to ignore the news with the shares trading marginally lower at 296p at midday.

Find out how to deal online from £1.50 in a SIPP, ISA or Dealing account. AJ Bell logo

Issue Date: 01 Oct 2020