Daily Mail

Miners cash in as gold rockets to a record high

- By John Abiona

GOLD producers were on the march as the price of the precious metal hit a record high.

While investors fretted about the health of the banking system and global economy, gold rose as high as £1,645 an ounce.

That was its highest ever level in sterling terms.

In dollar terms, it rose above $2,000 to just shy of the record set as the pandemic struck before easing back.

The rally sent shares in Londonlist­ed West African gold producer Endeavour Mining up 4pc, or 71p, to 1831p, Fresnillo gained 4.8pc, or 34p, to 744p and Centamin added 4.5pc, or 4.5p, to 105.15p.

Adrian Ash, director of research at investment platform Bullion Vault, said: ‘ Wholesale bullion stands out as the most tradable of physical assets.

‘It’s the deep liquidity in gold, added to the security of outright ownership, which is driving this jump in new demand.’

Mining stocks also received a boost from positive broker upgrades. Glencore rose 3.9pc, or 16.7p, to 449.35p after the Bank of America raised its rating to ‘buy’ from ‘neutral’.

A similar sentiment was echoed by analysts at UBS, which also upgraded the stock. They said they were ‘encouraged by recent China data which is somewhat stronger than expected’.

Likewise, Anglo American had its rating and target price upgraded by the Bank of America, which said the miner stood to make gains because it is a major platinum producer. Shares ascended 4.9pc, or 122p, to 2626p.

By contrast, oil prices tumbled to their lowest level since December 2021 amid fears over the health of the global economy. Brent crude dropped as low as $70 a barrel at one stage.

It sent Tullow Oil down 4.6pc, or 1.34p, to 27.6p and Harbour Energy fell 0.4pc, or 1.1p, to 246.6p. But BP added 1.5pc, or 7.05p, to 487p and Shell gained 1pc, or 22p, to 2236p.

Having opened firmly in the red amid banking turmoil, the FTSE 100 eventually added 0.9pc, or 68.45 points, to 7403.85. The FTSE 250 rose by 0.1pc, or 24.3 points, to 18495.13.

Smurfit Kappa became the latest London-listed company to withdraw from Russia. The packing firm has sold its Russian businesses in St Petersburg and Moscow to local management almost a year after it first signalled its intention to exit. Shares rose 2.3pc, or 66p, to 2893p.

Intertek, the quality assurance and product testing business, has appointed a finance boss.

Colm Deasy will take on the job after Jonathan Timmis stepped down with ‘immediate effect’.

He will also sit on a new group executive committee led by Intertek boss Andre Lacroix. Shares inched up 0.5pc, or 21p, to 3997p.

Meanwhile, ITV took a £16m hit linked to the Queen’s death last year. In its annual report for 2022, the broadcaste­r said it was forced to cancel several episodes of Spitting Image that satirised the former monarch, at a cost of £9m.

The remaining £7m came from extra news reporting. Shares rose 1.9pc, or 1.52p, to 80.06p.

At First Group, the bus and rail operator’s West Coast Partnershi­p contract has been extended by the Department for Transport to October 15. It had been due to expire at the end of this month. Shares fell 0.1pc, or 0.1p, to 104.5p.

AO World’s boss has handed nearly 1.5m of the company’s stock to charity. John Roberts, who owns 18.35pc of the white goods firm he founded 23 years ago, gave away 1,468,189 shares. That left him with 105.89m shares worth around £65m. Most of the stock given away went to the children’s charity OnSide Youth Zones.

Shares in AO rose 1.3pc, or 0.8p, to 61.8p.

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