Business Day

BAT’s blowout hammers market

- Karl Gernetzky Markets Writer gernetzkyk@businessli­ve.co.za

Thin liquidity on global markets and a spate of bad corporate news weighed on the JSE on Monday, with local retailers and industrial­s faring worst.

News that Saudi Arabia will cut oil exports from December sent the price of Brent crude higher, although it is still off its highs for the month.

Some caution was evident in the market, due to risk events later in the week. Brexit talks and discussion of the Italian budget deficit are both on the agenda, as is US inflation data on Wednesday.

The latter will be closely watched amid market jitters that the US Federal Reserve is growing increasing­ly hawkish and may move to accelerate monetary policy tightening.

The all share fell 1.94% to 52,259.5 points and the top 40 dropped 2.07%. Industrial­s lost 3.17%, general retailers 3.08% and banks 2.7%.

Corporate news was negative, with results from Rebosis and Vodacom both disappoint­ing the market.

Rand hedge British American Tobacco crashed 11.3% to R555.74, amid reports US authoritie­s are considerin­g banning menthol cigarettes.

Naspers gave up 3.45% to R2,650.35, extending a 5.31% fall last week. The company’s main asset, Tencent, has come under sustained pressure, including from moves by Chinese regulators to restrict gaming.

The local focus is on Thursday’s retail sales data for September, which could indicate whether SA escaped a recession in the third quarter.

Rand hedge AB InBev fell 1.16% to end at R1,052.02.

Richemont lost 0.5% to R96.30, having lost 6% on Friday after it reported a 2% decline in headline earnings per share for the six months to end-September.

FirstRand slumped 3.19% to R67.14. Mr Price lost 4.54% to R236.23 and Woolworths 3.58% to R53.64.

Vodacom slumped 7.69% to close at R120,30, after reporting earlier that group operating profit climbed 0.8% to R11bn in the six months to endSeptemb­er.

MTN gave up 6.01% to R79.89. Rebosis Property Fund plunged 23.46% to R4.60, after earlier reporting a decline in dividend growth for ordinary shares of 27.7% in the year to end-August.

Net1 UEPS rebounded 32.57% to R67, having crashed 46.86% on Friday after reporting group revenue dropped 17% to $126m in the year to endSeptemb­er, with profit under pressure from the cancellati­on of its social grants contract.

Shortly after the JSE closed gold was 0.35% lower at $1,205/oz and platinum 0.28% at $852.92.

Brent crude was 2.05% higher at $71.04 a barrel.

At the same time the Dow was off 0.63% to 25,824.31, the FTSE 100 had fallen 0.46%, the CAC 40 0.54% and the DAX 30 1.35%.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa