CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

FTSE 100 analysis: IDS shares rise as it appoints new CEO – Top UK stocks

Article By: ,  Former Market Analyst

FTSE 100 rises

The FTSE 100 is up 0.2% in early trade this morning, with the index at a one-month high.

Markets are digesting a flurry of earnings out this morning, with the economic calendar light today. The headline event is US initial jobless claims out this afternoon, alongside the Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing index and existing US home sales.

 

FTSE 100 analysis: Where next for the UK 100?

The UK 100, which tracks the FTSE 100, has soared over the past two weeks, having surged above the falling trendline that had provided a reliable ceiling over recent months and blowing past the 50-day moving average yesterday.

The next upside target is now 7,650, which was the ceiling we saw in the first half of June and in-line with the 100-day moving average. A sustained move above here could open the door to a larger jump to over 7,800! The RSI is in bullish territory and suggests there is further room for the index to rise, and the bullish candle we saw yesterday should also provide some confidence.

Investors will hope that the 7,550 will provide some support if it comes under renewed pressure, although there is a risk it could fall back toward 7,450 if it is severe.

Top UK stock news

International Distribution Systems is up 1.2% after it announced Martin Seidenberg will be its new chief executive as it reported first quarter results, revealing revenue edged up 0.3% from last year to £3.00 billion. A 4% drop in sales from Royal Mail was countered by 7.4% growth from GLS. It reiterated its outlook. Seidenberg will be charged with setting the company’s strategy and will appoint new CEOs for Royal Mail and GLS. He was part of the GLS team and has been CEO of the unit since June 2020. Before his time at the firm, he worked at Deutsche Post.

Airline easyJet is up 0.5% after it beat expectations as it delivered its highest pretax profit for any third quarter on record as the recovery from the pandemic continues. Passenger numbers were up 7% from last year but revenue soared 34% to £2.36 billion thanks to higher prices. That smashed the £2.3 billion forecast. Pretax profit of £203 million turned from a loss the year before and also blew the £161 million estimate out of the water. Its holiday arm continues to outperform and should contribute around £100 million in profits over the full year. The airline said the fourth quarter should be another record-setting period based on current bookings.

Dunelm is up 0.6% after sales rose 6% in the fourth quarter of its financial year to £381 million. That meant annual sales also rose 6% to £1.64 billion. The homeware retailer said pretax profit for the year should be ‘slightly ahead’ of expectations, which currently point toward a full year pretax profit of £188 million. Still, that is set to be down from the £212.8 million reported in the last financial year.

Babcock is down 1.8% this morning despite revealing revenue and margins improved in the year to the end of March and that cash generation improved significantly, as profits took a hit from exceptional items and losses on disposals. Sales rose to £4.43 billion from £4.10 billion. Operating profit slumped to just £45.5 million from over £226 million the year before, although increased on an underlying basis. It generated underlying free cashflow of £75.3 million compared to the outflow we saw the year before. It reiterated its guidance for the new financial year but said cashflow will be more weighted to the second half than previously expected. Importantly, it said revenue and margins should both improve and that it expects to reinstate its dividend!

QinetiQ Group is up 0.5% after the firm said it is on course to meet expectations this year after making a ‘positive’ start. It said the amount of revenue under contract has risen to £1.3 billion from £1.1 billion in April, giving it greater visibility going forward.

Vistry Group is down 0.4%. The housebuilder said it built 22% fewer houses in the first half of 2023 in response to more challenging conditions as higher interest rates weigh on demand for housing, although its average sales rate per week edged up to 0.86 from 0.84 the year before. However, it warned it has seen a slowdown since the latest rate hike and that it is cutting costs to try and counter the impact. It said 76% of units to be built this year have already been sold. Vistry is attempting to deliver adjusted pretax profit of at least £450 million over the full year. The integration of Countryside remains on track.

Premier Foods is up 2.9% after it said sales were up 21.1% in the first quarter and said trading profit should be at the ‘top end of market expectations’. Analysts currently estimate profits will come in the range of £162 million to £165.4 million over the full year.

Howden Joinery is down 0.3% after it said revenue growth stalled and profits fell in the first half as cost inflation continues to weigh on the bottom-line. The company said revenue was up 1.5% in the six-month period to £926.9 million, with 33% growth from overseas countering tepid 0.6% growth in the UK. Pretax profit was down 22.8% at £111.9 million as it struggled to  counter inflationary pressures with efforts to improve efficiency. The interim dividend was raised 2.1% to 4.8p. Comparatives were tough following the record year it experienced in 2022. It reiterated its full year ambitions.

Alphawave is up over 3% this morning after reporting strong topline growth in the second quarter as it continued to win new contracts. The company, which specialises in high-speed connectivity for high-tech solutions, said new bookings jumped to $84.1 million from $28.4 million the year before. It said it secured eight new design contracts and won its first deal to supply its more advanced 3nm custom silicon design. It said China accounts for less than 10% of its business amid rising geopolitical tensions. ‘Customers' demand for our high-performance IP and products supports our strong pipeline. We are excited about the year ahead and the long-term continued growth potential of our business,’ said CEO Tony Pialis. It reiterated its full year outlook and is targeting annual revenue of $340 million to $360 million with adjusted Ebitda of around $87 million.

SSE is up 0.5% after the utility provider reaffirmed its full year guidance this morning after revealing renewable energy output was 5% short of expectations in the first quarter because of dry weather conditions and a lack of wind. SSE said the key months are still to come and that conditions have normalised in the second quarter, giving it confidence in its annual goal to deliver adjusted EPS of over 150p.

BHP Group is up 1.4% after it said production met its guidance targets in the year to the end of June, with several of its projects reporting record output. Copper production was up 9% over the year at 1.7 million tonnes, driven by growth at Escondida, Pampa Norte and a huge jump in contribution from Copper South Australia following the recent acquisition of Oz Minerals. Iron ore production was up 1% at 257 million tonnes as WAIO and Samarco both increased output. Metallurgical coal was flat, thermal coal edged up 3% and nickel production rose 4%. Commodity prices were, generally speaking, lower than the year before while inflation continued to pressure costs. ‘BHP finished the year with a strong fourth quarter, increasing annual production across the board and achieving annual records at WAIO, Olympic Dam and Spence,’ said CEO Mike Henry. It warned it will book an exceptional cost of $250 million to $300 million to reflect higher mining tax rates in Chile.

Anglo American is up 1.9% after it said it grew output of copper, iron ore and metallurgical coal in the second quarter. The mining giant said platinum group metal production was down 9% at 943,000 ounces because of operational challenges and planned closures. Nickel output was down 4% thanks to lower grades, while diamond output declined 5%. Copper rose 56% as its new Quellaveco mine ramps-up. Iron ore was up 9% thanks to a hike in throughput at Minas-Rio. ‘Our focus remains resolutely on safely achieving our full year production guidance through the seasonally stronger second half of the year,’ said CEO Duncan Wanblad.

 

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