Daily Mail

Pound hits year-high as traders bet on rate hikes

- By John Abiona

The pound hit its highest level in nearly a year and global stock markets rallied at the end of a week that saw US banking stocks plunge and rate- setters usher in another round of hikes.

After days of turmoil on markets, sterling rose as high as $1.2650 as investors bet this week’s interest rate hike by the US Federal Reserve would be the last.

By contrast, the Bank of england is expected to raise rates from 4.25pc to 4.5pc as it continues its battle against inflation.

The dollar clawed back some losses later as upbeat jobs figures, showing employment rose by a better-than- expected 253,000 in April, underlined the resilience of the US economy.

On the stock market, the FTSE 100 rose 0.8pc, or 64.09 points, to to 7766.73 while the FTSE 250 gained 0.8pc, or 153.53 points, to 19,298.44.

Such gains were echoed around the world with the Dax up 1.2pc in Frankfurt and the Cac 1.2pc better off in Paris. In the US, on Wall Street, the S&P 500 gained 1.5pc, the Dow Jones rose 1.3pc and the technology-heavy Nasdaq inched up 1.7pc.

There was also respite for US regional banking stocks, which clawed back some losses.

having crashed 50pc to a record low on Thursday, shares in California’s PacWest rose more than 55pc in early trading. Arizona’s Western Alliance and Memphisbas­ed First Horizon also bounced back having shed more than 30pc in the previous session.

London banks also rallied as NatWest rose 2.7pc, or 6.9p, to 259.3p, Barclays added 3pc, or 4.44p, to 152.68p and Lloyds was up 1.4pc, or 0.63p, to 45.98p. Oil prices bounced back to reach around $74 a barrel. That lifted BP 3.4pc, to 16.35p, to 493p while Shell, which on Thursday reported a record first- quarter profit of £7.7bn, added 2.2pc, or 51.5p, to 2397p.

Ithaca Energy signed an agreement with Shell on how to sell the oil giant’s 30pc stake in the Cambo field. Ithaca, which floated at 250p in London last year, inched up 0.9pc, or 1.4p, to 153.8p.

Hilton Food Group, which sends meat and ready-to- eat meals to supermarke­ts, gained 3.8pc, or 27p, to 732p after hSBC reiterated its ‘buy’ rating and raised the target price to 1050p from 820p.

As hilton looks to improve the profitabil­ity in its UK seafood business, hSBC said it believes the ‘ worst is behind the company’.

There was less to cheer for Numis after the City broker reported a slump in revenue and profit. Its revenue slid 14pc to £63.8m in the six months to the end of March alongside a 55pc drop in profits to £6m. Alex ham and Ross Mitchinson, the co-chief executives at Numis, warned capital markets volumes are ‘likely to remain relatively low over the near term’.

The results came only a week after Deutsche Bank agreed to buy Numis for £410m. Numis was flat at 341p.

Property website On The Market signed an agreement to let one of the UK’s largest estate agents access its Teclet platform. The deal will see Arun estates use its softwares across its lettings business. Shares gained 4.3pc, or 3pc, to 73.5p.

Halma, the safety equipment maker, agreed to buy Sewertroni­cs, which uses ultraviole­t technology to fix sewage pipelines, for around £36m. Shares slid 0.1pc, or 2p, to 2390p.

TPX Impact, the business consulting firm, hiked its annual forecasts on the back of two major deals. It expects its revenue to grow between 15pc and 20pc for the year up to next March. Shares rose 1.2pc, or 0.5p, to 42p.

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