Daily Mail

Cheers! Investors raise a glass as pubs bounce back

- By John Abiona

PUB stocks rallied as brokers across the City raised a glass to improved trading in the sector.

As fears of a consumer slowdown this year swept through the industry, HSBC told its clients that its concerns have been ‘defied’ by encouragin­g demand and a positive sales outlook among bars and restaurant­s.

‘We had grown increasing­ly nervous on the consumer outlook and the risk of earnings downgrades, but these have not shown through,’ the broker said.

‘In short, the sector looks well set to grow profits and further earnings upgrades could occur.’

As a result HSBC upgraded its rating on Wetherspoo­ns from ‘hold’ to ‘buy’ and nearly doubled the target price to 940p.

Mitchells and Butlers was also lifted from ‘hold’ to ‘buy’ while its target price increased from 185p to 300p.

Pubs have been affected by rising costs and falling consumer spending. Wetherspoo­ns boss Tim Martin earlier this month said: ‘Inflation remains a more intractabl­e issue’

But with energy prices falling and food inflation becoming more stable, analysts hope pub operators will be in a better position.

Wetherspoo­ns was up 3.2pc, or 23p, to 733.5p, and Mitchells & Butlers added 1.4pc, or 2.8p, to 204.6p. The FTSE 100 fell 1pc, or 75.93 points, to 7446.14 and the FTSE 250 was down 0.5pc, or 84.47 points, to 18722.90.

In the latest FTSE reshuffle, Ocado escaped demotion from the blue-chip index. There was a promotion for IMI, the engineerin­g group, which will enter the top tier in place of the commercial property giant British Land.

Asos, Capricorn Energy and Tullow Oil were among those heading out of the FTSE 250.

Stephen Harris, the boss of Bodycote will retire next year after more than a decade at the helm.

He took over as chief executive of the heat treatment specialist back in 2009.

The news came as revenue rose 22pc to £281m in the first four months of the year.

Bodycote shares fell 1.6pc, or 10.5p, to 638.5p.

WH Smith enjoyed a positive session as the retailer cashed in on the ongoing rebound in travel ahead of the peak summer trading period.

The company, which owns more than 500 stores across airports, hospitals, railway stations and motorway service areas across the UK, said that its travel revenue in the 13 weeks to May 27 was up 31pc compared to the same period a year ago.

Peel Hunt analysts said that the ‘most pleasing element’ of the group’s performanc­e was arguably the 130 new stores that it is hoping to open. Shares rose 2.8pc, or 42p, to 1570p.

The race to snap up Purplebric­ks looked set reach a conclusion after a major shareholde­r, which last week made an eleventh-hour swoop on the online estate agent, withdrew its bid.

Lecram Holdings, which owns nearly 5.2pc of Purplebric­ks and is run by activist investor Adam Smith, had tabled a bid of 0.5p a share in cash, valuing Purplebric­ks at about £1.5m.

But it has decided to walk away on the basis that ‘ the financial condition of Purplebric­ks was found to be significan­tly worse than expected’.

Now, the only deal that is now left on the table is a sale for a token price of £1 to rival Strike.

The online estate agent’s shareholde­rs will vote on whether to back the offer in a general meeting on Friday.

Yesterday, the shares fell 27pc, or 0.17p, to 0.46p.

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