London midday: Housebuilders weigh as stocks drop into the red
London stocks had fallen into the red by midday on Tuesday as traders seemed unimpressed by a historic US-North Korea summit in Singapore, with housebuilders under the cosh after cost warnings from Crest Nicholson and the pound a touch firmer following fairly solid UK jobs data.
The FTSE 100 was down 0.3% at 7,714.62, while the pound reversed earlier losses to trade up 0.1% versus the dollar and the euro at 1.3386 and 1.1359, respectively, after data from the Office for National Statistics showed that employment in Britain rose to a new record high in the three months to April, although wage growth unexpectedly slowed.
Donald Trump and Kim Jong-un signed a document confirming that North Korea will begin dismantling its nuclear capabilities "very quickly", the US president said at a ceremony that followed a morning of negotiations. Kim said "we are leaving the past behind us" as he said "the world will see a major change".
Although Trump described the declaration as "very important" and "pretty comprehensive", analysts highlighted the lack of detail in terms of timing or checks on whether North Korea is making changes to its nuclear program.
Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG, said: "It looks a lot like ‘buy the rumour, sell the fact’ where the Trump-Kim summit is concerned. Having shrugged off the failed G7 meeting, markets are finding it hard to make progress this morning despite the bullishness that was very much in evidence yesterday. Perhaps the upcoming Fed and ECB meetings are keeping sentiment in check for the time being.
"The overall picture remains firmly bullish, and is probably an opportunity to add to risk in the near-term, markets having weathered the storm of trade wars successfully thus far."
Earlier, data showed that the number of people in work increased by 146,000 from the previous quarter taking the total to 32.39m. Unemployment fell by 38,000 to 1.42m - a rate of 4.2% that was in line with economists’ expectations and remained the lowest since 1975.
Total earnings including bonuses rose 2.5% - down from 2.6% in the three months to March. Economists on average had expected the rate of wage growth to be unchanged. Excluding bonuses, average weekly earnings growth slipped to 2.8% from 2.9%.
The weaker than expected wage growth could add to doubts about the strength of the economy as the Bank of England weighs up whether to increase interest rates in August. The BoE’s monetary policy committee has cited the prospect of higher pay growth as one of its main reasons for considering a rate rise.
The jobs and wages figures followed a series of weak economic numbers that cast doubt on the BoE’s belief that the economy’s sharp slowdown in the first quarter was caused by bad weather.
David Cheetham, chief market analyst at XTB, described the jobs report as "pretty solid overall", with the squeeze on real wages alleviated somewhat, as inflation has drifted back towards target after peaking near the back-end of last year, with the latest CPI release due on Wednesday and expected to remain at 2.4%.
Beauchamp added that the improvement in the employment picture was enough to give sterling a lift. "Solid wage gains should help reinforce the picture of a recovering UK consumer, but we will have to wait for tomorrow’s CPI before sterling bulls can declare victory."
In corporate news, housebuilders were a drag after Crest Nicholson reported a 2% drop in half-year pre-tax profit and warned that margins for the year would come in towards the lower end of its guidance range, squeezed by cost pressures.
Peer Bellway slipped despite saying it was on track for strong earnings growth this year and predicting record annual sales of more than 10,000 homes, while Bovis Homes, Redrow, Berkeley, Barratt, Persimmon and Taylor Wimpey were all weaker.
AstraZeneca was a touch lower after it said that it and partner Eli Lilly are discontinuing the global Phase III clinical trials of lanabecestat, which is an oral beta secretase cleaving enzyme inhibitor for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
Fashion brand Ted Baker was in the red even as it posted a 4.2% jump in group revenue for the 19 weeks to 9 June despite unseasonal weather across Europe and the East Coast of America and still-challenging external trading conditions across many of its global markets.
British American Tobacco fell after saying it was trading in line with expectations but that first half sales would be lower and that profit would be affected by significant currency fluctuations.
Acacia Mining lost its shine after announcing a fatal accident involving an operator for one of its contractors at North Mara gold mine, and Randgold Resources declined as it noted "unrest" in Mali, not far from its Gounkoto mine.
Rio Tinto fell after it appointed Jakob Stausholm, who recently stepped down as CFO of shipping group AP Moller-Maersk, as its new chief financial officer, while Domino's Pizza tumbled after it announced that chief financial officer Rachel Osborne left the group a day earlier.
Halma reversed earlier gained to trade just lower as it posted a 9% increase in fiscal 2018 pre-tax profit and said revenue exceeded £1bn for the first time.
On the broker note front, Centrica was sitting pretty at the top of the FTSE 100 leader board, boosted by an upgrade to 'buy' at Jefferies, while IMI rallied on the back of an upgrade to 'overweight' at Morgan Stanley.
Rotork and Tate & Lyle both retreated after downgrades by Morgan Stanley and Kepler Cheuvreux, respectively.
Market Movers
FTSE 100 (UKX) 7,714.62 -0.29%
FTSE 250 (MCX) 21,281.41 -0.18%
techMARK (TASX) 3,555.36 0.16%
FTSE 100 - Risers
Centrica (CNA) 147.95p 2.32%
Evraz (EVR) 547.40p 1.94%
Reckitt Benckiser Group (RB.) 5,988.00p 1.75%
Old Mutual (OML) 220.80p 1.19%
BT Group (BT.A) 209.05p 0.99%
Kingfisher (KGF) 307.40p 0.89%
Rolls-Royce Holdings (RR.) 840.00p 0.86%
Hargreaves Lansdown (HL.) 2,001.00p 0.70%
Royal Mail (RMG) 491.80p 0.68%
Marks & Spencer Group (MKS) 299.60p 0.64%
FTSE 100 - Fallers
Barratt Developments (BDEV) 564.20p -2.56%
Anglo American (AAL) 1,825.80p -2.53%
Berkeley Group Holdings (The) (BKG) 4,197.00p -2.51%
Taylor Wimpey (TW.) 186.40p -1.61%
Persimmon (PSN) 2,815.00p -1.57%
Mondi (MNDI) 2,096.00p -1.55%
Smurfit Kappa Group (SKG) 2,938.00p -1.54%
Antofagasta (ANTO) 1,076.50p -1.46%
BHP Billiton (BLT) 1,745.80p -1.30%
Experian (EXPN) 1,847.50p -1.26%
FTSE 250 - Risers
Ultra Electronics Holdings (ULE) 1,658.00p 2.85%
IMI (IMI) 1,207.00p 2.81%
Contour Global (GLO) 228.00p 2.70%
Renishaw (RSW) 5,715.00p 2.70%
Computacenter (CCC) 1,420.00p 2.01%
Bakkavor Group (BAKK) 199.00p 1.53%
Grafton Group Units (GFTU) 788.76p 1.51%
Sophos Group (SOPH) 597.00p 1.27%
Schroder Asia Pacific Fund (SDP) 482.00p 1.26%
Stagecoach Group (SGC) 138.00p 1.25%
FTSE 250 - Fallers
Crest Nicholson Holdings (CRST) 416.60p -6.63%
Alfa Financial Software Holdings (ALFA) 193.60p -5.56%
Domino's Pizza Group (DOM) 363.90p -5.55%
Ocado Group (OCDO) 1,059.00p -4.68%
Ted Baker (TED) 2,292.00p -3.94%
Redrow (RDW) 593.50p -3.02%
Bovis Homes Group (BVS) 1,237.00p -2.87%
Superdry (SDRY) 1,236.00p -2.75%
Bellway (BWY) 3,317.00p -2.70%
Tate & Lyle (TATE) 663.87p -2.23%