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FTSE halts rally as Greece debt talks flounder
by Max Julius on Feb 06, 2012 at 10:54
Britain’s FTSE 100 halted a four-day rally on Monday, as financial stocks fell amid a deadlock in negotiations between Greece and its international creditors over a €130 billion (£108 billion) rescue package.
The UK index of blue-chip shares pulled back 0.37%, or 22 points, to 5,879 and the All Share index gave up 0.4%, or 12 points, to 3,035. See the FTSE’s performance and the index’s top winners and losers.
Portugal fears
Greek political leaders failed on Sunday to agree on the painful reforms demanded by the European Union and International Monetary Fund in return for the new bailout – without which the country will face a chaotic default.
‘To our minds such an outcome would be very negative for Greece, but also raise concerns on the broader ability of the euro area to secure non market funding for those member states where this many prove necessary,’ warned Michala Marcussen, global head of economics at Société Générale.
She added that Portugal was ‘top of the list of concerns’, noting that while the drop in its borrowing costs of late was encouraging, their levels were still far from what would allow the country to return to market funding in 2013, as expected under its current international rescue programme.
Glencore slips
Meanwhile, financials topped the loser board on the FTSE 100, mirroring declines by their rivals on the continent as they gave back recent gains. Admiral Group (ADML.L) lost 31p to £10.07, Aviva (AV.L) shed 5p to 372p and Standard Chartered (STAN.L) weakened 18p to £15.86.
Glencore (GLEN.L) was the second biggest faller, dropping 13p to 470p, following a report in the Financial Times that the commodities trader was to pay a larger-than-expected premium to seal its proposed $88 billion merger with miner Xstrata (XTA.L), a constituent of Citywire Top Stocks®.
Randgold Resources (RRS.L) was the top gainer, taking on 115p to £75.15, after the gold miner doubled its dividend on the back of a 259% jump in profit last year.
Elsewhere, small-cap French Connection (FCCN.L) sank 7.5p, or 13%, to 50.2p in the wake of a fresh profit warning from the fashion group.
‘After a second profits warning in six months management will need to improve credibility before any change in view,’ said Freddie George, analyst at Seymour Pierce, cutting the broker’s price target to 50p from 60p.
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2 comments so far. Why not have your say?
Julian Stevens
Feb 06, 2012 at 12:25
Greece will default. It's only a matter of time and how disorderly that default is. Almost all of the next €103Bn bail-out it requires within the coming couple of weeks is merely so it has sufficient funds to redeem its latest tranche of maturing government bonds. It won't actually put any money in the national coffers. And the Greek government remains stubbornly resistant to all proposals from outside as to how it must tighten its belt still further.
As I see it, the other EU countries must surely know that Greece is an unsalvageable basket case. The real strategy is to stave off its inevitable collapse so as to give the other EU countries a bit more time to recover (assuming they ever do) before the Greek ship finally goes down, thereby avoiding a domino effect.
report thisMike Morley
Feb 06, 2012 at 13:47
And more pertinently delay the default until after a couple of upcoming elections in core EU member states.
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