The FTSE has managed to shrug off any negative sentiment from last night’s US trading and is up 12 points in the first couple of hours trading.

Tesco has shocked the markets by announcing another profits warning, slashing its dividend by 75% and rushing in the new CEO Dave Lewis a month before he was originally due to start. All this smacks of desperation and the change in dividend will see the 6% yield plummet down to just 1.5%, a move that is likely to trigger aggressive selling from those who had previously been investing for the income. Unsurprisingly UK food retailers dominate the list of stocks falling in the FTSE with Sainsburys, Morrisons and Marks & Spencers all tumbling. Persistent rumours continue to linger that Pfizer has not completely given up hope of acquiring AstraZeneca, as the shares have added another 2.4% in
morning trading.

As the days tick down to September's Scottish independence vote a number of poles now indicate that the 'yes votes' have seen their chances greatly improved following the second of the two debates. This is in contrast to the IG binary bet which is still suggesting an 83% possibility of a 'no vote', a very different picture when people are putting money where their mouth is.

The week has seen a continuation of mixed messages from the ECB and eurozone nations (Germany) as the debate over when stimulus can be added, before or after further austerity, rages on. This morning’s eurozone inflation figures have, as expected, dropped to 0.3%. Considering the weak inflation figures we had seen from both Germany and Spain yesterday this was always on the cards.

US markets closed lower across the board last night as the wobbles from global equity markets dented the confidence of Wall Street traders. Future indications are already pointing towards the S&P 500 retaking the 2,000 level in today’s trading. It is worth remembering that Monday will see US markets closed as the nation celebrates Labor Day, and the looming long weekend may encourage a bout of good old fashioned profit-taking before the close tonight.

Ahead of the open we expect the Dow Jones to start 38 points higher at 17,117.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD posts gain, yet dive below 0.6500 amid Aussie CPI, ahead of US GDP

AUD/USD posts gain, yet dive below 0.6500 amid Aussie CPI, ahead of US GDP

The Aussie Dollar finished Wednesday’s session with decent gains of 0.15% against the US Dollar, yet it retreated from weekly highs of 0.6529, which it hit after a hotter-than-expected inflation report. As the Asian session begins, the AUD/USD trades around 0.6495.

AUD/USD News

USD/JPY finds its highest bids since 1990, approaches 156.00

USD/JPY finds its highest bids since 1990, approaches 156.00

USD/JPY broke into its highest chart territory since June of 1990 on Wednesday, peaking near 155.40 for the first time in 34 years as the Japanese Yen continues to tumble across the broad FX market. 

USD/JPY News

Gold stays firm amid higher US yields as traders await US GDP data

Gold stays firm amid higher US yields as traders await US GDP data

Gold recovers from recent losses, buoyed by market interest despite a stronger US Dollar and higher US Treasury yields. De-escalation of Middle East tensions contributed to increased market stability, denting the appetite for Gold buying.

Gold News

Ethereum suffers slight pullback, Hong Kong spot ETH ETFs to begin trading on April 30

Ethereum suffers slight pullback, Hong Kong spot ETH ETFs to begin trading on April 30

Ethereum suffered a brief decline on Wednesday afternoon despite increased accumulation from whales. This follows Ethereum restaking protocol Renzo restaked ETH crashing from its 1:1 peg with ETH and increased activities surrounding spot Ethereum ETFs.

Read more

Dow Jones Industrial Average hesitates on Wednesday as markets wait for key US data

Dow Jones Industrial Average hesitates on Wednesday as markets wait for key US data

The DJIA stumbled on Wednesday, falling from recent highs near 38,550.00 as investors ease off of Tuesday’s risk appetite. The index recovered as US data continues to vex financial markets that remain overwhelmingly focused on rate cuts from the US Fed.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures