Scottish Daily Mail

Airline stocks grounded by new Covid travel ban

- By Lucy White

Airline stocks plunged as travel bans were introduced following the emergence of a new strain of coronaviru­s.

On a bleak day for investors that saw the FTSE 100 dive 1.7pc, or 112.86 points, to 6416.32, shares in British Airways owner IAG fell 8pc, or 12.45p, to 143.9p.

Easyjet was down 7.2pc, or 58.8p, to 757.2p, and aircraft engine maker Rolls-Royce sank 3.3pc, or 3.7p, to 110.25p.

Other travel companies were caught in the sell-off after numerous countries banned travel from the UK amid concerns of a more infectious strain of Covid-19 – cruise operator Carnival fell 5.6pc, or 76.5p, to 1295p.

Oil stocks were also hammered as travel bans fuelled fears over demand for fuel, sending crude down 3.5pc to $50 a barrel.

Shell’s troubles were evident in a trading update in which it said it is expecting to write down the value of various assets by up to £3.4bn in the last three months of the year.

This means impairment­s for the full year could rise above the £16.5bn Shell flagged over the summer. it has been attempting to cut costs, and announced yesterday that it was selling its 26pc stake in an Australian gas project for £1.9bn.

But its shares still slid by 5.7pc, or 76p, to 1265p. rival BP was down 4.9pc, or 13.3p, at 258.05p, and Petrofac fell 7.7pc, or 11.85p, to 141.7p.

One firm on the rise was Ocado, which managed to gain 5.6pc, or 123p, to 2332p as traders predicted online shopping and panicbuyin­g would take off again.

The rising caution among investors did boost some gold stocks, as the precious metal is seen as a safe haven in times of uncertaint­y. Centamin was up 3.8pc, or 4.6p, to 124.5p, and minnow miner Tectonic Gold – listed on challenger stock exchange Aquis – climbed 13.1pc, or 0.2p, to 1.5p.

its share price was helped out by drilling results from a new site in Australia, which indicated the area was rich in gold. Managing director Brett Boynton enthusiast­ically called the results a ‘fantastic early Christmas present’.

Coronaviru­s has also played into the hands of some medical stocks. AiM-listed Synairgen, which rallied on Friday after being allowed to speed up a trial in the US of its medication which it thinks could treat the disease, climbed another 6.5pc, or 9p, to 148p.

And Novacyt, the stellar stock which has rocketed an incomprehe­nsible 6892pc this year on the back of its coronaviru­s tests, was up 10pc, or 83p, at 909p after confirming that its tests were still able to detect all known strains of the virus.

Setting aside the pandemic, Metro Bank celebrated its best day in a while after selling a portfolio of its mortgages to Natwest on Friday night. The £3bn deal, which will see 13,000 Metro mortgage customers transferre­d to natwest, reduces Metro’s loan book by 20pc and frees up more money for it to spend on more profitable lending.

Analysts at Jefferies said: ‘investors in Metro should welcome the news, as this removes the nearterm need to raise £200-£300m of likely expensive senior debt.’

Metro shot up 23.1pc, or 26.5p, to 141.3p, while natwest was down 2.5pc, or 3.9p, at 153.45p.

Fast-fashion giant Boohoo finally has an auditor, after PwC quit in the wake of allegation­s the company was contributi­ng to modern slavery in its supply chain.

But eyebrows were raised over the replacemen­t, PKF littlejohn, which is only the seventh-largest accountanc­y firm in the UK by number of stock market clients.

it remains to be seen how it will cope with Boohoo, a £3.9bn firm. Boohoo shares slipped 1.1pc, or 3.4p, to 306.1p.

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