Western Morning News

Lenders drag FTSE down amid negative rates talk

6,049

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THE UK’s biggest high street lenders pulled markets lower yesterday after they were hit by talk of possible negative interest rates.

Natwest, Barclays, HSBC and Lloyds were all in the red as the day ended, dropping between 1.2% and 3%.

The Bank of England may have held off on making any changes to interest rates, but just the talk of negative rates was enough to spark a slide for the banks, said Michael Hewson, an analyst at CMC Markets.

The struggling banks helped push the FTSE 100 down by half a per cent to 6,049.92 points, a drop of 28.56.

On the other side of the pond, a similar story played out, as action – or perhaps the lack of it – by the Federal Reserve on Wednesday left traders unimpresse­d.

“The markets still couldn’t shake the niggling feeling that the Fed let them down on Wednesday night,” said Connor Campbell from Spreadex, nor were they helped by worse-than-expected US jobs figures.

By the end of play in Europe on Thursday, the S&P 500 lost 1%, while the Dow Jones was down 0.4%.

In Europe, the Cac index in France lost 0.5%, while Germany’s Dax dropped by 0.2%.

Mr Hewson said: “Markets in Europe have come under pressure today, though they are off their lows, as concerns about the economic outlook, and the timing of a vaccine contribute to a prevailing sense of renewed uncertaint­y, as the World Health Organisati­on warns about an alarming rise in coronaviru­s cases across Europe.”

In company news, retailers managed to offset some of the FTSE’s retreat.

Next predicted its profits will be vastly ahead of previous expectatio­ns. The clothes retailer now expects to make around £300 million before tax this year – £105 million more than it had predicted just two months ago. Shares jumped up 4.2%.

As Office for National Statistics data showed that nearly two thirds of adults are now travelling to work, the highest proportion in months, ticket sales app Trainline revealed that it expects to report losses up to £19 million in the six months to August 31 as sales slumped. But investors were not put off, and encouraged by better trading in the second quarter they sent Trainline’s shares up by 3.6%.

Shareholde­rs fired a warning shot across Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary’s desk when less than two thirds of them voted for his pay package, worried over his nearly half a million euro bonus at a time when the airline is struggling with reduced demand. But on the markets they were kinder to the Irishman, sending the shares in Ryanair up by 1%.

Carnival’s shares remained flat, up 0.1%, after its subsidiary P&O Cruises cancelled all cruises until January.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Next, up 256p to 6426p, Sainsbury, up 6.15p to 191.15p, Ocado, up 71p to 2712p, Segro, up 21.6p to 964.8p, and Rentokil, up 11.6p to 556.8p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Polymetal, down 69p to 1881p, WPP, down 19.8p to 628p, Natwest, down 3.05p to 100.05p, Taylor Wimpey, down 3.2p to 110.1p, and Standard Chartered, down 9p to 372.6p.

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