Thursday, May 23, 2013

Reuters: Hot Stocks: UK's FTSE suffers worst day in a year on stimulus taper worries

Reuters: Hot Stocks
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UK's FTSE suffers worst day in a year on stimulus taper worries
May 23rd 2013, 15:51

Thu May 23, 2013 11:51am EDT

  * FTSE 100 down 2.1 pct, worst fall since last May      * Investors await more weakness before buying the dip      * Small caps, dividend payers outperform        By Toni Vorobyova      LONDON, May 23 (Reuters) - Britain's FTSE 100 share index  suffered its biggest one-day drop in a year on Thursday, knocked  off historic peaks by weak economic data and signs the U.S.  Federal Reserve could soon taper its stimulus programme.      Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said late on Wednesday the central  bank could scale back quantitative easing in coming months if  economic momentum was maintained, thus threatening the removal  of the stimulus which has been a key driver of the year-long  equity market rally.       News of a slowdown in factory activity in China, a top  market for Britain's heavyweight miners, gave investors a  further excuse to take profits.       The FTSE 100 fell 143.48 points, or 2.1 percent, to  6,696.79, retreating from Wednesday's 13-year peak of 6,875.62  and suffering its biggest one-day drop since last May.      "Given the storming start we've had to the year, a bit of  profit taking at some point was inevitable. Markets have reached  year end levels that most people had penciled in ... and most  institutional investors don't have a great deal of confidence in  this market, nobody is in this for the long haul," said Mike  Ingram, market analyst at BGC Partners.          Of the 100 blue chips, 94 closed lower - the highest number  of fallers since September, according to Datastream.       There was some buying into the dip towards the end of the  session, but the move was more muted than in previous falls.      "You would need to see several hundred points off the index  before you can think about putting money in," said Andrew  Feldhaus, investment manager at Redmayne Bentley.      Smaller caps, which tend to be more focused on company  specific factors than macro news, fared a bit better, with the  FTSE Small Caps index down 1.7 percent.      "Some of the smaller companies in the UK are still very  under-owned, some of them continue to trade well irrespective of  the economy at large and, if they've got a strong balance sheet,  whilst their share price might go down, hopefully after it all  settles down they will go back up again because they are already  cheap," said Gervais Williams, managing director at Miton Group.      Within the bigger stocks, investors focused on companies  with strong dividends. United Utilities was one of the  few gainers, up 0.8 percent, after unveiling in-line full-year  results and increasing its payout to shareholders.      Meanwhile mid-cap bicycles-to-car-parts group Halfords   paid for slashing its dividend to fund a three-year  sales push, sending shares down 16 percent.     (editing by Ron Askew)  
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