Scottish Daily Mail

Holiday horror hits Jet2 as shares take a plunge

- By Tom Witherow

SHARES in airline Jet2 plunged yesterday as it announced a £422m share issue to help the business ride out the pandemic.

Bosses said the new equity gave it enough liquidity to see it through an extended and unpredicta­ble shutdown, but maintained a cautious approach to the 2021 summer season.

The new shares, at a price of 1180p, 9pc discount, were equivalent to a fifth of its share capital before the fundraisin­g. Shares fell 7.2pc, or 94p, to 1204p.

Getaways are banned under lockdown and ministers have advised holidaymak­ers not to book trips abroad this summer.

But now travellers into the UK must have three Covid-19 tests – one before departure and two in the days after arrival.

The move plunged travel firms deeper into crisis following a year of travel restrictio­ns, which have ravaged airlines’ balance sheets.

Sunseekers have also been put on edge by Australia-style hotel quarantine, costing £1,750 per person, for those returning from red list countries. The malaise dragged shares down across the industry yesterday with cruise operator Carnival down 2.9pc, or 37.5p, to 1263p, and Holiday Inn hotels owner IHG down 0.6pc, or 30p, to 4895p.

Tui, the world’s largest holiday group, which said it will run 80pc of its normal capacity this summer, also suffered falling 1.7pc, or 5.7p, to 317p.

British Airways owner IAG fell as well in early trading, but recovered as the day wore on to finish up 0.4pc, or 0.55p, at 149.45p,

Shares in care home investor Target Healthcare fell after it said it would raise £50m to buy new sites to help fund the acquisitio­n of new sites. It said it had seen a significan­t jump in inquiries, leaving it rushing to find new homes. But shares fell 3.1pc, or 3.6p, to 113p, as it said it would raise the cash via an issue of new shares.

The market overall had a shaky start following revelation­s that the UK economy shrank by a record 9.9pc last year due to the effects of the pandemic.

But positive growth in the fourth quarter, allowing the UK to avoid a double dip recession, helped allay investors’ fears and the FTSE 100 index rose 0.94pc, or 61.07 points, to 6589.79. This represente­d a 1.2pc rise over the week. The FTSE 250, meanwhile, finished up 0.09pc, or 19.62 points, at 21037.47 points.

Traders wrestled with the negative figures, matched with uncertaint­y over when lockdown will lift, with the positive outlook on a ‘Roaring 20s’ thanks to the (on target) vaccine rollout.

Retailers were some of the biggest fallers, with Tesco down 1.6pc, or 3.9pc, to 240.6p, B & Q owner Kingfisher down 2.2pc, or 6.1p, to 270.9p, and WH Smith was down 1.7pc, or 27p, to 1548p.

Mining stocks also lost out, with Antofagast­a down 0.5pc, or 7p, to 1533p, Fresnillo was off 1pc, or 10p, to 1020.5p and Glencore fell 0.3pc, or 0.7p, to 268.8p.

Likewise bank stocks were in the red ahead of results season next week and some shoddy numbers from Commerzban­k in Germany. Sentiment was also being damaged as trading in the derivative­s market flooded out of London last month to rival financial centres in New York, Amsterdam and Paris.

Stats from IHS Markit showed that trading of swaps in London dropped from nearly 40pc of the market last July to 10pc in January. Natwest was down 0.5pc, or 0.85p, to 171.35p, while Barclays fell 0.04pc, or 0.06p, at 145.9p.

Pan-African fuel retailer Vivo Energy provided a bright spot. It upgraded earnings ahead of analysts’ forecasts and announced a dividend, thanks to limited travel restrictio­ns in the countries where it operates. Its shares rose 5.8p, or 4.5pc, to 82.7p.

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