Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Reuters: Hot Stocks: FTSE rises on policy support but stalls near five-year highs

Reuters: Hot Stocks
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FTSE rises on policy support but stalls near five-year highs
Mar 5th 2013, 12:18

Tue Mar 5, 2013 7:18am EST

  * FTSE 100 index rises 0.7 percent      * Cyclicals gain after China, U.S. promise growth stimulus      * Standard Chartered gains after 10th straight profit rise      * Serco, Wood Group surge, could retain blue-chip status        By Alistair Smout      LONDON, March 5 (Reuters) - Britain's blue chip shares rose  on Tuesday, as policymakers' comments and solid company reports  took it towards five-year highs, but it was unable to sustain a  break above a key resistance level.      Financials and miners added the most weight to the FTSE 100   as the world's two biggest economies reiterated steps  they would take to support economic growth.      The U.S. Federal Reserve's vice chair Janet Yellen stood  firmly behind the use of continued aggressive monetary policy,  while China reaffirmed its 7.5 percent growth target, supporting  appetite for riskier stocks overnight and into early trade in  Europe.        European and British business sentiment surveys came in  ahead of expectations, also helping sentiment. However, the FTSE  100 did not quite touch five-year highs set in February, and was  unable to sustain a break above 6,400, leaving it stuck at the  top end of a recent six-week range.      "Newsflow not just in the UK but elsewhere has been  supportive today," Jeremy Batstone-Carr, analyst at Charles  Stanley, said.      "I'm still wary though. I'm not convinced that at these  kinds of levels investors should necessarily be buying into the  pro-cyclical growth story."      Miners rose 1.8 percent, one of the so-called  "cyclical" sectors which rise and fall with optimism over the  economy.      The FTSE 100 was up 42.08 points, or 0.7 percent, at  6,387.71 by 1145 GMT, off a five-year peak of 6,412.44 struck on  Feb. 20, with financials, a broad-based sector including banks,  asset managers and insurers, adding 11 points to the index.      Heavyweight blue-chip bank Standard Chartered rose  almost 2.6 percent after the bank delivered its 10th successive  rise in yearly profit, bucking a trend in the UK banking sector,  which has seen mostly disappointing results.      StanChart said it had started this year with strong momentum  and was confident for the year ahead.       "[It's] a refreshing report following the horror shows from  RBS and Lloyds," Marc Kimsey, senior trader at  Accendo Markets, said in a trading note.      "Standard Chartered should be the cornerstone of any  long-term portfolio."            RELEGATION BATTLE      The day's top movers all face potential demotion from the  FTSE 100 at the close of play on Tuesday, with dramatic price  movements potentially keeping previously under-threat stocks in  the blue-chip index.       The quarterly index review will be announced after the  market close on Wednesday but changes will be based on Tuesday's  closing prices.      Outsourcer Serco, which had been set for relegation  from the FTSE 100, jumped 8.8 percent after it relaxed its  payout policy and ramped up its total dividend by 20 percent  year-on-year as part of a forecast-beating full-year report.      As things stood, it had overtaken Intu Properties   in rankings of size by market capitalisation. If this was  maintained heading into the close, Intu rather than Serco would  lose its blue-chip status.       Intu was one of only a few fallers on the FTSE, sliding 1.3  percent - the biggest drop on the index.      John Wood Group advanced 7.4 percent, as the  relegation-threatened energy services firm also posted stellar  results, including a 35 percent jump in profits.       However, having fallen behind Serco in size in recent days,  Wood Group would only be saved from demotion if mid-cap London  Stock Exchange, up 2.3 percent, dropped below 90th  position and so missed out on automatic promotion.        (Editing by Susan Fenton)  
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