Monday, March 25, 2013

Reuters: Hot Stocks: Britain's FTSE rebounds, banks cheer Cyprus bailout

Reuters: Hot Stocks
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Britain's FTSE rebounds, banks cheer Cyprus bailout
Mar 25th 2013, 11:51

Mon Mar 25, 2013 7:51am EDT

  * FTSE 100 index rises 0.8 percent, led by banks      * Traders expect profit taking before quarter-end, Easter      * Technical charts show broad up-trend intact -Westhouse        By Toni Vorobyova      LONDON, March 25 (Reuters) - Britain's FTSE 100 rebounded on  Monday, bolstered by a last-minute bailout deal for Cyprus which  helped restore confidence in the European banking sector.      Cyprus secured the 10 billion euro ($13.00 billion) rescue  from international lenders overnight, in exchange for shutting  down its second-biggest bank, spelling heavy losses for big  depositors but, crucially, sticking to EU guarantees and  protecting deposits of less than 100,000 euros.       The news bolstered bank shares across Europe, which had sold  off sharply last week on concerns that any break of EU  guarantees in Cyprus could undermine the confidence of  depositors in other euro zone countries, sparking capital  flight.      Britain's FTSE 350 banking index added 1.4 percent  , clawing back some of last week's 4.1 percent  slide, which was the sector's worst weekly showing in 10 months.           The blue chip FTSE 100 index was up 53.23 points, or  0.8 percent, at 6,445.99 by 1113 GMT. It broke through minor  technical resistance at the 20- and 30-day moving averages and  edged back towards a five-year high of 6,533.99 points set  earlier this month.      The UK benchmark also got a boost from a 3.1 percent rise in  Vodafone, the fourth biggest company in the index.       It was boosted by renewed speculation the telecoms company  could be working towards a deal to either sell its 45 percent  stake in Verizon Wireless in the United States, or merge itself  with the Wireless unit's co-parent Verizon.         However, with FTSE 100 investors sitting on gains of 1.3  percent for March and 9.3 percent since the start of the year,  traders said they expected profit taking ahead of a four-day  Easter weekend with Thursday the final trading day of the  quarter.       "We've had a bit of a rally on the Cyprus story, all the UK  banks are up 2 percent-plus on the news ... It gives the market  a bit more clarity but I think there will be a cap on how far we  can go on this," said Adam Seagrave, equity trader at Saxo Bank.      "The deal was really something that we should have been  expecting, so I would expect that there will be people looking  to trim (long positions) on this pop higher because we are  running into the weekend."      In contrast, euro zone blue chips are up just 3 percent this  year and investors in euro zone markets may be more inclined  than London investors to stay in the market ahead of the  quarter-end in the hope of boosting quarterly performance, by  "window dressing".      Beyond any potential jitters this week though, technical  charts pointed to more gains for the FTSE 100, pushing the index  back above the four-month uptrend line.      "The logical level is the 2007 highs at 6,750. We've just  had another absorption of bad news and it (the up-trend) is  still very much intact," said Dominic Hawker, technical  strategist at Westhouse Securities.      "The market at the moment is in a very broadly based  up-trend, the only really weak sector is still the miners -  there are layers of support around here but they certainly lack  momentum. They are the only ones really failing to participate  in the rally."         Mining shares are being held down by shaky metals prices,  structural problems in the sector and concerns about demand from  China.      The mining share index was up just 0.6 percent,  while shares of industrial metals' companies rose  only 0.3 percent.   ($1 = 0.7694 euros)     (Editing by Susan Fenton)  
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