Western Mail

MARKET REPORT

-

GLOBAL markets slumped after new figures revealed a major manufactur­ing slowdown with mass factory job cuts across the world.

The FTSE 100 slid into the red after the closely watched Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) fell to 47.8 in March, down from 51.7 in February.

The reading, which was matched by declines elsewhere in Europe, represente­d the sharpest fall in manufactur­ing output since July 2012.

London’s top flight closed 217.39 points lower at 5,454.57 at the end of trading yesterday.

Meanwhile, sterling slipped against the stronger dollar amid caution over the manufactur­ing sector data. The value of the pound fell 0.18% versus the US dollar at 1.239 and was up 0.75% against the euro at 1.133.

Banking firms performed particular­ly badly on Tuesday, weighing down the FTSE 100 after they became the latest to scrap billions of pounds in dividends.

It came after a request from the Bank of England’s Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) that they suspend all plans to return money to shareholde­rs.

HSBC fell 43.25p lower to 411p, Royal Bank of Scotland fell 5.9p to 107p, Lloyds closed 3.73p lower at 28.27p and Barclays slid 11.25p to 82.86p.

In company news, BP shares dipped after the oil giant said it is acting quickly to strengthen its finances amid the “most brutal environmen­t for oil and gas businesses in decades”. The company said it will reduce its capital spending plans by 25%, with a new forecast of $12bn (£9.7bn), as part of cost reductions to mitigate plummeting oil prices. Shares moved 10.5p lower to 333.7p.

Auto Trader shares dived after the online car seller and trading platform revealed plans for an investor cash call to bolster its balance sheet as it furloughed staff. It said it would launch a placing of up to 46.5 million new shares representi­ng around 5% of its issued shares capital to strengthen its finances. Shares fell 48.5p to 390.6p.

The price of oil moved back into the red as demand woes continued to press on the market. The price of a barrel of Brent crude oil decreased 3.56% to 24.9 US dollars.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Ocado, up 109.5p at 1,329.5p, BAT, up 97.5p at 2,856.5p, Imperial Brands, up 33.2p at 1,530p, and Morrisons, up 2.5p at 180.5p.

The biggest fallers were Carnival, down 202.4p at 779p, Meggitt, down 44.7p at 245.6p, Melrose, down 13.5p at 78p, and Barclays, down 11.25p to 82.86p.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom