Daily Mail

Cosmetics house plunges 37pc as it is hit by delays

- by Victoria Ibitoye

The Santa rally fell short in the final session before Christmas as the FTSE 100 dipped 11.32 points, or 0.2pc, to 7592.66 points from its all-time high of 7603.98 on Thursday.

The rally typically caps the trading year off and is believed to be driven by shareholde­rs reinvestin­g their bonuses and fund managers preparing for the new year.

The FTSE 250, however, finished 58.34 points higher, up by 0.3pc, at 20481.07.

healthcare company Integumen slumped after revealing it would be reviewing its product lines to identify products that have the best commercial opportunit­ies.

The company, which did not identify which, or if, it would be cutting its cosmetics lines, said some of its product lines were taking longer to generate the level of sales expected, while others have the potential to outperform.

It is banking on Stoer, a range of male cosmetics it acquired last month, and premium anti-aging brand Visible Youth to be bestseller­s. Stoer is named after a small village on Scotland’s west coast and makes skin products to combat different environmen­tal factors such as pollution, adverse weather and environmen­tal aggressors such as sun damage.

It is already available in harvey Nichols while Visible Youth is set to enter the market.

Integumen has signed a nonbinding letter of intent with Champion Shave, a men’s grooming company backed by sporting superstars Usain Bolt and Ronaldinho, to use its branding to distribute its products online and in shops in the UK.

But the news that it was reviewing its cost base sent shares plummeting 36.6pc, or 0.85p, to 1.48p. Investors in Carillion breathed a sigh of relief after the firm was given extra time to push back the test dates for its loan agreement.

The constructi­on company, which has seen its shares plummet more than 92pc this year after a string of profit warnings, said it is continuing discussion­s with stakeholde­rs over how to reduce its debt. Keith Cochrane, interim chief executive, said: ‘We believe that our lenders’ decision to defer the test date demonstrat­es their continuing support.’

Shares were initially up 1.5pc in early trading, but finished flat at 17.25p at close.

The Government’s crackdown on crippling ground rents took a toll on Ground Rents Income

Fund. Leasehold homes make up 11pc of its portfolio and, of that, 18pc of the homes are subject to doubling ground rents.

The controvers­ial scheme, which in some instances sees ground rents double in ten years, had left some householde­rs unable to sell ‘unmortgage­able’ homes because banks were refusing to offer loans to would-be buyers.

The company dropped 1.5pc, or 1.75p, to 115.75p, after it said it would delay the roll- out of its asset management programme, which gave owners with doubling groundrent­s a way out of their contracts, to ‘digest the statements’ from the Government.

It said it welcomed steps taken on poor practices concerning leasehold houses, with directors backing a White Paper ‘Fixing Our Broken housing Market’.

Narrowing losses and booming demand in India failed to stop shares in KSK Power Venture dropping 10.1pc, or 4p, to 35.5p.

And specialist security and services firm Westminste­r Group soared 73.3pc, or 6.88p, to 16.25p, after an agreement with a Middle eastern client.

Westminste­r said its chief executive, who has recently returned from an extended visit to the region, had ironed out ‘all but a few’ minor issues relating to the deal expected to generate around £21.2m a year.

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