The Herald

Rocketing Babcock pushes up the FTSE 250

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THE smaller of London’s two biggest indexes managed to outperform its larger rival as shares in Babcock surged on Tuesday.

The FTSE 250 ended the day up 0.5% while the FTSE 100 was practicall­y flat, ending up just 1.37 points to 6,890.49.

The difference between the two was in no small part because of Babcock. The defence contractor surprised investors with the announceme­nt that it would slash around 1,000 jobs as it revealed write-downs of

£1.7 billion.

But investors rewarded the move with a 32% share price increase when markets closed on Tuesday. The company unveiled a turnaround plan which included raising at least £400 million from selling assets.

Markets otherwise remained subdued in London. The FTSE 100’s finish compared unfavourab­ly next to some of its European counterpar­ts.

The Dax and Cac in Frankfurt and Paris rose

0.1% and 0.4% respective­ly.

Meanwhile, across the Atlantic, the Dow Jones was trading down 0.4% as markets closed in Europe, while the S&P 500 rose 0.1%.

“Contributi­ng to the weak open from the US was the FDA’S warning that use of the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine needs to be paused, for similar reasons to the blood-clotting fears caused by the Astrazenec­a/oxford jab,” said Spreadex analyst Connor Campbell.

News that the UK’S GDP grew despite lockdown was welcomed by analysts on Tuesday morning, as industrial and manufactur­ing production exceeded expectatio­ns. Sterling was flat against the dollar, buying 1.3739, and dipped 0.2% buying 1.1513 euros.

The price of Brent crude oil rose 1% to $63.92 per barrel.

Just Eat Takeaway.com led the FTSE 100 as it soared 6.8% after releasing sales data for the last three months. Order numbers soared by nearly four fifths to 200 million amid lockdown, the takeaway giant said.

It was joined in the green by JD Sports, which revealed that it expects its current financial year to be rosier than first thought. Shares rose 3% as it upgraded its profit outlook.

Recruiter Hays rose 3.6% as it said that it expects to

beat expectatio­ns with an £85 million operating profit in the year to the end of June.

Revolution Bars Group was also in the green despite falling to an £18m pre-tax loss for the last half-year. Shares rose 5.3%.

Land Sec said that it had collected 67% or rent due for the quarter ending March, with agreements that might see that rise to 77% in time. Its shares rose 1%.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Just Eat Takeaway.com, up 501p to 7855p, Polymetal, up 52p to 1499.5p, Auto Trader, up 19.8p to 590.4p, JD Sports, up 27.2p to 940.8p, and Weir Group, up 50.5p to 1894p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were United Utilities, down 22.8p to 946.8p, Severn Trent, down 39p to 2393p, Lloyds, down 0.64p to 43.75p, SSE, down 22p to 1511p, and IAG, down 2.95p to 203.4p.

 ??  ?? Shares in Revolution Bars climbed by 5.3%
Shares in Revolution Bars climbed by 5.3%

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