Scottish Daily Mail

Stocks hit for six as new Covid rules take their toll

- by Francesca Washtell

THERE was more gloom for the FTSE 250 as the Government’s ‘rule of six’ policy sent investors fleeing from pub, leisure and travel stocks.

The mid-cap index fell for a second day as traders digested the news that crowds of more than six people meeting will be banned in England from Monday, to slow the rapidly spreading coronaviru­s.

The rules apply to pubs and restaurant­s but they will be able to remain open to multiple groups of six-or-fewer because of the strict hygiene rules they are following.

Test-and-trace efforts, previously voluntary, will now be mandatory. If traders were meant to feel reassured, they were not. Instead, it fanned fears of further lockdowns and dented fragile consumer confidence that so recently started to rise again.

Wetherspoo­n was the sharpest faller on the mid-cap index, which is more exposed to what happens to events within the UK than the export-focused FTSE 100.

The pub chain’s shares sank 9.5pc, or 99p, to 947p, while Cineworld plunged 7.4pc, or 4.24p, to 52.78p, train and airport station cafe owner SSP slid 6.3pc, or 16p, to 236.6p, and WH Smith, which has become reliant on the performanc­e of its shops at transport hubs, fell 4.23pc, or 51p, to 1137p.

In all, the FTSE 250 fell 0.2pc, or 30.25 points, to 17,594.93

The crisis also hit stocks on the FTSE All-Share index, where

Marston’s dropped 8.5pc, or 4.38p, to 47.22p and Wagamama-owner

Restaurant Group slid 11pc, or 7.05p, to 57.3p.

Of course, the ‘rule of six’ wasn’t all that traders had to contend with yesterday.

A setback in AstraZenec­a’s Covid-19 vaccine trial, which has been temporaril­y paused after one participan­t fell ill, also made the market nervous.

Susannah Streeter, senior investment and markets analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said the news had ‘a domino effect’ on British Airways owner IAG (down 3.6pc, or 7.4p, to 200.4p), Holiday Inn owner Whitbread (3.6pc lower, down 87p, to 2364p) and Interconti­nental Hotels Group (down 2.7pc, or 121p, to 4356p). After a tricky day, however,

AstraZenec­a managed to rise, finishing 0.5pc higher, or 38p, to 8386p, while the Footsie rose 1.4pc, or 82.54 points, to 6012.84

Oxford Biomedica, the Oxford University spin-off that had recently signed a manufactur­ing deal with Astra for the vaccine, was not so lucky, falling 3.3pc, or 28p, to 832p.

BT got a second wind from an upgrade from brokers at Barclays, which hoisted its target price for shares from 130p to 160p on a ‘rapidly improving outlook’ for the Openreach division. The company’s

shares climbed 5.6pc, or 5.85p, to 110p.

Aston Martin revved up after analysts at Bernstein started covering the luxury car maker, slapping it with an ‘outperform’ rating and saying that it is good value for money.

Brokers believe the pandemic will push people to drive more and tipped premium brands such as Aston to be in high demand for older drivers. Shares rose 6.6pc, or 3.65p, to 59.15p. Battle body armour-maker Avon

Rubber rose 6.3pc, or 235p, to 3950p, after it agreed to buy Team Wendy, a helmet maker, in a £100m deal that comes shortly after Avon agreed to sell off its dairy equipment division.

Elsewhere, beleaguere­d energy group Tullow Oil dived 17.5pc, or 3.39p, to 16.04p after it swung to a £1bn loss and warned it was at risk of defaulting on one of its debts. It is exploring ‘various refinancin­g alternativ­es’. Oil prices began to claw back from steep losses on Monday, rising above the $40 a barrel mark again.

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