The FTSE 100 is up 0.8 per cent in early trading. Among the companies with reports and trading updates today are Thames Water, WPP, Quilter, Legal & General, Hiscox and Glencore. Read the Wednesday 7 August Business Live blog below.
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Legal & General lifts dividend as bumper annuity sales boost profits
Record sales of individual annuities helped Legal & General boost its bottom line in the first half and beat market expectations.
Legal & General reported a 1 per cent increase in first half core operating profit to £849million, beating analyst forecasts, as higher interest rates make fixed income pension products more attractive to savers.
The life insurer and asset manager, which is currently in the throes of a major overhaul led by new boss Antonio Simoes, sold £1.2billion of individual annuities in the period, more than double the previous year.
Thames Water faces independent supervision after credit downgrades lead to licence breach
Ofwat is set to impose an independent monitor on Thames Water after the debt riddled utility firm was stripped of two investment-grade credit ratings.
The monitor will supervise Thames Water and report back findings to Ofwat, ensuring the group improves its performance via series of commitments, the regulator said.
A week later, Standard & Poor's reduced the group's Class A debt rating to BB and its Class B debt rating to B, saying its liquidity had 'deteriorated to a less-than-adequate position.'
The downgrades meant Britain's biggest water supplier had officially breached its operating licence.
Hiscox interims miss expectations as US digital business weighs
Hiscox has missed first-half profit expectations, as slower growth at the insurance firm's US digital business weighed on its results.
The FTSE 250 Lloyds of London insurer reported a 7 per cent rise in pre-tax profit of $283.5million for the six months ended 30 June, compared with $290million in a company-compiled consensus.
Hiscox shares, which had rallied last month after takeover speculations, have slipped 1 per cent in early trade.
The group's focus on investing in underwriting, however, has helped it increase its underwriting result to $241million despite a more active loss environment, CEO Aki Hussain said in a statement.
Legal & General lifted by record retail annuity business
Legal & General has posted a 1 per cent rise in core operating profit to £849million for the first half, thanks to record retail volumes in annuities and US protection.
Senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, Matt Britzman:
'Record levels of retail annuity business helped push operating profit past expectations as people have been snapping up higher-rate annuity deals in anticipation of rates coming back down.
'Legal & General is a leader in the market and managed to increase market share over the half and plump up its own results. The pension risk business (bulk annuity) was a little soft over the half, but a surge after the period ended was welcome news. This will remain a medium-term driver of growth as pension plans look to shift their liabilities to insurance giants like L&G.
'There are a lot of strings to L&G's bow, with bulk annuities at its core, and the market looks like it’ll stay healthy over the medium term. The next challenge is to deliver improved performance from the refreshed Asset Management division, which will carry some execution risk.
'There’s plenty to like here; the balance sheet is strong, and total returns to shareholders are attractive with a growing dividend and ongoing buybacks too.'
Market open: FTSE 100 up 0.7%; FTSE 250 adds 0.7%
London-listed stocks look set for a second consecutive day of gains after Monday's sell-off, boosted by financial stocks and corporate earnings, as markets stabilise.
Banks have jumped 1.4 per cent and are among the top gainers after rising 0.4 per cent in the previous session,
The investment banking and brokerage sector is up 1.7 per cent, lifted by a 4.5 per cent advance in wealth manager Quilter after it beat half-year earnings forecasts and reported stronger net inflows of cash.
Inter-dealer broker TP ICAP has surged 10 per cent after a rise in its half-year pre-tax profit, further supporting the sector. The stock tops the FTSE 250 index.
Homebuilders have advanced 1.3 per cent after data showed that housing prices in the country rose by the most in six months in July.
On the other hand, precious metal miners haev inched 0.1 per cent lower, although gold prices hold steady after a decline in the previous session.
WPP is down 1.3 per cent after the ad group cut its annual revenue growth forecast and agreed to sell its controlling stake in FGS Global to KKR for $775million.
Bottler Coca-Cola HBC is down 2.3 per cent despite boosting its annual operating profit and revenue forecast and a higher first-half revenue.
Private equity firms hold breath as Labour budget promises tax hikes
Private equity firms are nervously awaiting the Government’s first Budget after Rachel Reeves has refused to rule out a capital gains tax hike.
Last week, the Chancellor warned that difficult decisions were required to plug a £22billion budget black hole that was discovered after Labour won the Election last month.
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Quilter profits and inflows soar
FTSE 250 wealth manager Quilter beat earnings and inflows forecasts in the first half, as more wealthy clients flocked to the firm's funds.
Quilter posted net inflows of £1.5billion over the first six months of the year - up from around £200million the prior year - and total assets of £113.8billion, all beating analyst forecasts compiled by the company.
The company also reported a 28 per cent jump in adjusted pre-tax profit to £97million and announced an interim dividend of 1.7p per share.
Boss Steven Levin said:
'With UK inflation easing, consumers' disposable income has improved, leading to early signs of incremental discretionary saving.
'We expect new business levels across the industry in 2024 to be higher than in 2023.
'Interest rates also remained supportive in the first half, sustaining the investment return generated on shareholder funds which, together with strong cost management, led to a 28% increase in first half adjusted profit.
'While expected lower interest rates in the second half will reduce investment income, we would also expect lower rates to support market levels and increase client focus on long-term saving, both of which are supportive for new business flows and revenue growth.'
High Street lenders must be better prepared for a financial crisis, Bank of England warns
High Street lenders must improve their crisis plans to prepare for a potential collapse, the Bank of England said yesterday.
The findings were part of the central bank’s investigation into whether banks could ‘safely’ shut down without disrupting the financial system or forcing a taxpayer bailout.
Barclays, HSBC, Lloyds and Standard Chartered were among those told that they need to be more prepared for a potential failure.
WPP cuts guidance and sells FGS stake to pay debt
WPP has agreed to sell its controlling stake in FGS Global to minority shareholder KKR for $775million, with the cash earmarked to pay down the British ad group's debt pile/
The move, which implues an enterprise value for the financial PR agency of $1.7billion, came as the group downgraded its 2024 guidance after organic growth suffered again in the first half.
Mark Read, CEO of WPP, said:
'The sale of FGS represents an excellent outcome for WPP. Together with the management of FGS we have built a world-leading strategic communications and advisory group, creating considerable value for all stakeholders.
'We have achieved an attractive price, enabling WPP to accelerate the crystallisation of the significant value created.
'This also provides WPP with greater financial and management flexibility as we continue to grow our core business including Burson and Ogilvy Public Relations which give our clients access to world-class public relations services.'
Thames Water set for Ofwat monitor after debt downgrades
Ofwat has imposed an independent monitor to supervise Thames Water and report back findings to the regulator, after two bond rating downgrades led the debt riddled utility to breach its operating licence.
It follows separate moves from credit ratings agencies S&P and Moody's, which stripped Thames Water bonds of their investment grade rating.
Ofwat said the independent monitor would help ensure Thames Water improves its performance, with the country's biggest supplier subject to a series of commitments.
Ofwat boss David Black added:
'We are clear that Thames Water needs to remedy its licence breach, turnaround its operational performance and secure backing from investors to restore its loss of investment grade credit rating.
'These enforceable commitments will include our putting an independent Monitor into the business, to report back to us on what is happening to drive meaningful change in performance, and to ensure appropriate expertise is added to their Board.
'We will continue to monitor progress very closely and will not hesitate to take any further action if necessary.'