The Scotsman

Supermarke­ts in investors’ sights after Morrisons deal

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Sainsbury’s finished top of the FTSE 100 index on Monday after a battle to take over rival supermarke­t Morrisons ended in a sale to a US private equity company.

The buyer Clayton, Dubilier & Rice (CD&R) will likely pay £7 billion for Morrisons, after winning an auction process. Shareholde­rs still get to vote on the deal later this month.

But Sainsbury’s 3.4% rise did not offset falls elsewhere on the FTSE, including in Morrisons’ share price, and the index which closed down 16.06 points, or 0.2% to 7,011.01.

AJ Bell financial analyst Danni Hewson said that the market is now thinking about who might be next in the sights of a large potential bidder.

“Investors seem to be betting that this latest episode of supermarke­t sweep hasn’t rolled the end credits quite yet,” she said

“Morrisons might have sailed through the checkout and is now sitting in the bagging area waiting to see if the sale goes through but there are still two tempting morsels left on the shelf.

“Whilst most of the money seems to favour Sainsbury as the most likely target, there is much speculatio­n that those private equity boffins might well be pawing over Tesco’s receipts.”

She added that one potential bidder might be Fortress, which lost the auction to CD&R.

“The thing about the UK supermarke­t is that it is a money-spinner and though competitio­n is back on the menu after the discounter­s came off the bench that they’d rested on during the Covid crisis, there is a certain certainty about the business model that may inspire a second or even a third glance.”

Other strong performers on Monday included BP and Shell, which were both in the green amid a strong oil price. Brent crude oil had risen 2.7% to 81.39 dollars per barrel by the end of the day.

The price was pushed up by reports suggesting that oil-producing organisati­on Opec and its allies are unlikely to announce further production increases.

In Europe, the Frankfurt Dax index closed down 0.8%, while the Cac 40 in Paris dropped 0.9%. US markets were heavily in the red as the trading day ended in Europe. The Dow Jones had lost 1%, while the S&P 500 was down 1.4%.

In currency markets, sterling rose 0.1% to 1.3611 against the dollar and 1.1714 against the euro.

In company news, retailer French Connection saw its share price soar 21% after its board agreed a plan to sell the company to a major shareholde­r for £29 million.

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