Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Reuters: Hot Stocks: Standard Chartered leads Britain's FTSE higher

Reuters: Hot Stocks
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Standard Chartered leads Britain's FTSE higher
Feb 19th 2013, 12:06

Tue Feb 19, 2013 7:06am EST

  * FTSE 100 index up 0.4 percent      * StanChart adds 3.1 pct after M. Stanley recommendation      * UK shares extend gains after strong German confidence data      * Vodafone takes 8.4 points off index after downgrade        By Alistair Smout      LONDON, Feb 19 (Reuters) - Britain's blue chip shares rose  on Tuesday, led by gains in Standard Chartered after it was  upgraded by Morgan Stanley, and supported by a strong German  business sentiment survey.      Standard Chartered jumped 2.9 percent, with traders  citing a note from Morgan Stanley which recommended switching  into the bank and out of the UK's other Asia-focused bank, HSBC  .       HSBC fell 0.4 percent, flouting the two banks' tendency to  move in tandem.      "Earnings momentum and valuation are two reasons to prefer  Standard Chartered to HSBC right now," Simon Maughan, financial  sector strategist at Olivetree Securities, said.      Although StanChart's share price correlation with HSBC over  the past two years is 70 percent, over the last year it has  fallen to 57 percent, he said.      "HSBC has outperformed Standard, but that is irrelevant  without the additional catalysts (of valuation and earnings)."      The FTSE 100 was up 22.77 points, or 0.4 percent, at  6,340.96 by 1126 GMT, with financials adding 10 points to the  index.      The index added an extra 0.1 percent after the German ZEW  survey, a gauge of investor and analyst sentiment in Europe's  largest economy, came in well ahead of expectations.      The Mannheim-based ZEW think-tank said on Tuesday its  monthly poll of economic sentiment rose to 48.2 points from 31.5  in January, beating even the highest expectation in a Reuters  poll with a median forecast for 35.0 points.       "The ZEW survey was a very good number. They seem to be  almost a quarter ahead of their data. The ZEW number has been  getting better even as the data has been getting worse," said  Will Hedden, sales trader at IG Index.      Since breaking through the 6,200 level towards the end of  January, the FTSE 100 has been trading in a 200-point range for  three weeks.      "We've been around these levels for a few weeks now, and  with a (ZEW) number like that, you'd be surprised to see these  gains evaporate," said Hedden.            VODAFONE'S "STRUCTURAL DECLINE"      Gains were broad-based, with all but two sectors  contributing to the index's advance.       The rise on the broader index came despite heavyweight  mobile telecoms firm Vodafone trimming 8.4 points off  the index and taking the telecom sector into negative territory.      Its shares fell 2.6 percent after Bernstein cut its rating  on the stock to "underperform", highlighting concerns over  European operations.      "Vodafone's European operations are in structural decline -  in the oversupplied and commoditised business of European  wireless Vodafone is neither the lowest-cost provider nor a  differentiated operator," Bernstein said in a note.      InterContinental Hotels (IHG) also fell, losing 1.6  percent, after the hotel group reported results as investors  banked profits after the shares hit an all-time high in the  previous session.      IHG, the world's biggest hotelier, posted an 11 percent rise  in 2012 operating profit, underpinned by strong U.S. growth and  expansion in developing markets.       Investec Securities, however, cut its rating on the company  to "hold" from "buy" following a 30 percent rally in IHG shares  over the last three months.     (Additional reporting by David Brett; Editing by Susan Fenton)  
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