The Guardian (USA)

Nearly £2bn wiped off travel shares as Austria orders lockdown

- Mark Sweney and Graeme Wearden

Almost £2bn was wiped off the value of UK airlines and travel-related companies on Friday as Austria’s decision to order a national lockdown stoked fears of the introducti­on of new pandemic restrictio­ns across Europe.

Austria will go into its third national lockdown from Monday, which could last until 12 December, in an attempt to arrest a surge in coronaviru­s cases and rising deaths.

The potential for restrictiv­e measures to be introduced in other European countries – there is a similar Covid resurgence in Germany – led to a sharp sell off UK-listed companies in the travel sector.

IAG, the owner of British Airways, fell 3.8%, wiping almost £300m off the company’s market capitalisa­tion. IAG, which also owns the airline Iberia, fell to a two-month low as investors washed out the gains seen when transatlan­tic travel to the US resumed last week.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 included Rolls-Royce, down almost 4%, with the Premier Inn owner, Whitbread, which also operates in Germany, and Interconti­nental Hotels group also dropping.

The blue-chip index fell to its lowest level in three weeks, closing down 32 points at 7223.

“Surging case numbers [in Austria] have far surpassed last year’s peak,” said Craig Erlam, a senior market analyst at the trading company Oanda. “While fatalities remain well below the peak, they are accelerati­ng and the government is clearly keen to arrest it before the situation potentiall­y becomes much worse. With Germany seeing a similar trend, the question now becomes whether the region’s largest economy will follow the same path.”

Businesses affected by negative investor sentiment on Friday also included the airlines easyJet, Ryanair, Lufthansa and Wizz Air, as well as the package holiday firm Tui and cruise operator Carnival.

Shares in SSP, which runs the Caffè Ritazza and Upper Crust chains at transport hubs, and Restaurant Group, which runs chains including Wagamama and Frankie & Benny’s, also took a hit. National Express and WH Smith, which operates in airports and train stations, also suffered share price falls.

Jens Spahn, Germany’s health minister, said on Friday the country was “facing a national emergency” and did not rule out a similar national lockdown. “We’re in a situation where we can’t rule anything out,” he said.

On Thursday, the head of Germany’s disease control agency said the country was heading for a “very bad Christmas” if drastic measures were not taken to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Erlam said: “The situation is not quite so severe in other countries like France, Italy and Spain but that could change in the coming weeks, as we saw around the same time last year. High vaccinatio­n rates mean the link between case numbers and fatalities is far lower but the former is rising at a remarkable rate, which is clearly making it very hard to ignore.”

Oil also fell heavily on worries that winter demand for energy would be hit by new lockdowns. Brent crude tumbled over 3.5% to $78.31 a barrel, the lowest since 1st October and nearly 10% below last month’s three-year highs.

Some economists warned that the US could be vulnerable to a new wave of infections this winter. Less than 60% of the nation is vaccinated, lower than some European nations.

“The colder weather has already triggered a big resurgence in infection rates in Europe and, with US vaccinatio­n rates generally lower, there is a risk of a seasonal surge in the midwest and north-east,” said Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics.

Energy stocks, banks and industrial stocks fell on Wall Street, while a rally into tech companies – who are less vulnerable to lockdowns – pushed the Nasdaq Composite to a new record high.

 ?? Photograph: Reuters ?? Concerns about the possibilit­y of new lockdown restrictio­ns being introduced in Europe pushed down shares in the jet engine maker RollsRoyce.
Photograph: Reuters Concerns about the possibilit­y of new lockdown restrictio­ns being introduced in Europe pushed down shares in the jet engine maker RollsRoyce.

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