10th December 2009
Londons top stocks are slightly lower in early dealings Thursday morning despite progress from US blue chips last night.
United Utilities is leading the fallers following news that its chief financial officer Tim Weller is to jump ship to take over the CFO role at the Cable & Wireless division, Cable & Wireless Worldwide. Weller will join the Cable & Wireless Worldwide board of directors in May 2010.
Miners are also among the worst performers, with Anglo American, Rio Tinto, Vedanta Resources, Lonmin and BHP Billiton all down.
Higher sales from its shops helped sports retailer Sports Direct shrug of a decline in its wholesale business to post a rise in sales and underlying pre-tax profits. In the half year to October 25, revenues climbed to Ł756.9m from Ł687.7m over the same period the previous year. Underlying pre-tax profits climbed to Ł71.9m from Ł51.8m.
Electronic components distributor Premier Farnell reported a 37% fall in third quarter profits but said the period has seen further improvement as the rate of year on year sales decline in its business continued to ease.
Carillion, the support services and construction firm, has won preferred bidder status for the Southmead Hospital public/private partnership development project in Bristol.
Copper miner Kazakhmys has increased the stake it will sell in its Ekibastuz GRES -1 power plant from 25% to 50%. The consideration will increase from $339m to $681m and will primarily be used by Kazakhmys to repay debt.
Packaging and office products wholesaler DS Smith expects to exceed full-year expectations after a relatively good first half.
Energy efficiency company Eaga expects to notch up double digit percentage growth in profits in the first half of its financial year. The company said that revenues across all of the groups core segments have continued to grow year on year since its mid-October trading update.
Menswear retailer Moss Bros said it had seen a marked improvement in trading in the 18 weeks to 5 December, with like-for-like sales up 5.5%.
Kazakhstan-focused oil and gas company Max Petroleum slipped deep into the red at the interim stage after taking a massive hit on credit facility restructuring costs.
Latin American oil and gas group Geopark has made a gas discovery in a new reservoir in its recently drilled Monte Aymond 34 well in Chile.
FTSE 100 - Risers
British Sky Broadcasting Group (BSY) 550.00p +1.10%
SEGRO (SGRO) 336.60p +0.99%
BT Group (BT.A) 141.20p +0.71%
Cairn Energy (CNE) 3,106.00p +0.68%
Rentokil Initial (RTO) 97.25p +0.67%
Schroders NV (SDRC) 985.50p +0.66%
Burberry Group (BRBY) 572.00p +0.62%
Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY) 55.00p +0.57%
Kazakhmys (KAZ) 1,231.00p +0.57%
HSBC Holdings (HSBA) 702.70p +0.53%
FTSE 100 - Fallers
United Utilities Group (UU.) 487.00p -1.24%
Anglo American (AAL) 2,500.00p -1.19%
Rio Tinto (RIO) 3,103.50p -1.16%
Aviva (AV.) 364.70p -1.11%
Land Securities Group (LAND) 640.00p -1.08%
Prudential (PRU) 602.00p -0.91%
London Stock Exchange Group (LSE) 706.50p -0.91%
Vedanta Resources (VED) 2,309.00p -0.90%
Lonmin (LMI) 1,720.00p -0.75%
BHP Billiton (BLT) 1,838.00p -0.68%
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