Archived article
Please note that tax, investment, pension and ISA rules can change and the information and any views contained in this article may now be inaccurate.
UK stocks made modest gains in early trade on Wednesday after a rally on Wall Street saw the the Dow Jones Industrial Average breach the 30,000 point mark for the first time.
Sentiment has been buoyed by Covid-19 vaccine hopes and a market embrace of senior personnel picks by president-elect Joe Biden, including former federal reserve chair Janet Yellen as treasury secretary.
At 0820, the benchmark FTSE 100 index was up 5.82 points, or 0.1%, at 6,437.99, adding to Tuesday's xx gain.
Banking group Virgin Money UK dropped 6.4% to 137.55p, having posted a £168 million annual loss after its margins shrank and it booked a higher credit impairment charge to account for unpaid loans during the Covid-19 crisis.
Virgin Money's underlying profit, which excluded transformation costs and legacy conduct charges, slumped 77% to £124 million. Impairment losses on credit exposures roughly doubled to £507 million.
Water supplier United Utilities climbed 3.3% to 925.6p, even as it posted a 16% fall in first-half underlying profit after new pricing controls hurt its revenue.
United Utilities nevertheless declared an interim dividend of 14.41p, up 1.5% year-on-year, citing the strength of its balance sheet.
Home improvement retailer Kingfisher slipped 0.8% to 275.3p following news that it had acquired NeedHelp, an online DIY services marketplaces, for about €10 million.
Flow control and instrumentation group Rotork firmed 3.8% to 330.08p on announcing that it expected its annual adjusted operating profit to be at, or slightly above, the top end of the range of current market expectations.
Rotork's company-complied range of market expectations for adjusted operating profit in the year through December was £124 million-to-£136 million.
Engineering group Melrose Industries rallied 7.8% to 175.85p as it, too, said it was trading at the top end of its expectations for 2020.
Melrose said the relatively upbeat performance reflected a faster-than-expected recovery in automotive markets and a continued strong performance at its Nortek Air Management division.
Wealth manager Brewin Dolphin fell 0.9% to 290p after it trimmed its dividend as annual profit slipped amid higher costs that offset increased net inflows and income.
Brewin Dolphin declared a final dividend of 9.9p per share, bringing the total for 2020 to 14.3p per share, down from 16.4p per share a year earlier.
Furniture retailer ScS shed 3.1% to 192.32p as its order intake dropped off precipitously in recent weeks due to fresh national lockdowns.
Order intake in the 17 weeks between 26 July and 21 November grew 15%, including growth of 32% in the first 14 of those weeks. In the final three, however, order intake had plummeted 65%.
Clinical technology company Sensyne Health added 3.5% to 143.9p on signing a five-year non-exclusive research agreement with Hampshire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
