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UK stocks opened substantially lower on Friday after Apple and Amazon provided disappointing earnings updates and budget carrier Ryanair warned of a long-lingering impact from the Covid-19 crisis.
At 0821, the benchmark FTSE 100 index was down 144.27 points, or 2.4%, at 5.756.94.
Apple jangled nerves by omitting an earnings forecast for the first time in decades, while Amazon warned of a second-quarter loss.
At home, Royal Bank of Scotland gained 2.1% to 112.85p, even as it reported a 59% slump in first-quarter profit owing to borrowers struggling to repay loans amid the Covid-19 crisis.
Ryanair dropped 4.7% to 9.83c on announcing that it expected to layoff up to 3,000 workers and was planning to cut aircraft orders.
Ryanair said demand may not fully recover from the Covid-19 crisis for at least two years. It also warned a planned restructuring could result in the 'loss of unpaid leave' and involve pay cuts of up to 20%.
The gloomy update reverberated throughout the airline sector, with EasyJet falling 5.7% to 568.6p.
British Airways owner International Consolidated Airlines descended 4.6% to 211.72p, even as Spanish subsidiaries Iberia and Vueling secured syndicated loan agreements for €750m and €260m, respectively.
House builder Barrett Developments shed 1.5% to 511.44p, as it warned of a fall in completions.
On the positive side, Barrett said it would carry out a phased return to work on its construction sites from 11 May.
Iron deficiency focused Shield Therapeutics dropped 12% after it warned of a fall in revenue due to a disappointing trial result and related repayment of a milestone payment.
Gem miner Petra Diamonds gained 1.6% to 2.18p as its operations in South Africa ramped up to 50% employment capacity, in line with government instructions.
Alternative fuels developer Quadrise Fuels International slipped 2.0% to 1.5p, despite announcing that fresh cost cuts meant it could keep operating until midway through the second quarter of 2021 with its current funding.
Retail space marketer SpaceandPeople jumped 17% to 6.75p on announcing hat it had received £1m in funds, having had application approved to access the UK government's coronavirus business interruption loan scheme.
