Economic woes weigh on markets

The Federal Reserve's improved assessment of the US economy may hasten the end of the stimulus packages, but UK retail sales showed that the UK recovery is far from self-sustaining.

Hemscott Editor | 17-12-09 | E-mail Article

Retail sales volumes slipped 0.3% in November against weak comparative figures. This quashed hopes of a last minute surge in the UK economy in 2009 and reversed two months of rises. Clothing was particularly weak, as were department store sales, while non-discretionary spending such as supermarkets held up better.

The failure of travel group Flyglobespan also demonstrated the fragility of the UK’s economic situation. Markets were certainly hoping for better ahead of the withdrawal of the stimulus packages both here and in the US. VAT is due to rise early in 2010 and will put further pressure on retail sales in the first quarter.

These problems, plus the weakness in Greece, weighed on the market, which opened weaker. The FTSE 100 was off around 50 points by mid-morning and slipped further when the US markets opened ultimately closing down 90 points to 5,230. The US markets were dragged down by weakness in Citigroup, as the Government announced that it would delay the sale of part of its share in the bank. Shares were also hit by renewed strength in the dollar.

In the UK, it was a quiet day for corporate announcements, but JJB Sports was a notable casualty of consumer reluctance to spend. Its shares dipped 8.04% to 25.75p after it announced revenues down 52% over the 20 weeks to 13 December. It said baldly that it was cautious about Christmas and New Year and expects trading to remain difficult

Other retailers also suffered. Kingfisher, owner of B&Q, dipped 2.02% to 228.4p. Home Retail Group, the owner of Argos and Homebase, fell 3.78% to 284.8p. Economically sensitive groups, such as the mining stocks also slipped, despite the good economic news from the US. Xstrata was one of the biggest fallers on the FTSE, sliding 8.28% to 997p.

The banks also had a horrible day on the back of weakness in the US financial sector. Lloyds was the worst performer, down 8.06% to 51.1p, but Barclays, HSBC and RBS also saw a weak day's trading.

Good news was thin on the ground, but international property group Savills gave some small cheer. It said that its full year results would be considerably ahead of expectations as transaction volumes in its UK and Asian businesses had risen. It also said that its commercial property business seemed to have turned a corner. Its shares rose 3.86% to 301.2p

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