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FTSE 100 Stumbles – Shell Makes Gains As Housebuilders Slump

Asktraders News Team trader
Updated 31 Oct 2024

The UK's benchmark FTSE 100 index, currently trades down 1%, as US markets opened to a red wave. The trend has been bearish over recent sessions, with today's drop marking the third consecutive day of declines. Over the month of October, the FTSE 100 has fallen by 2.34%, and now sits below 8,100, up just 4.70% through the year-to-date.

This downtrend reflects the market's trepidation over potentially higher borrowing costs, which could dampen economic growth, as well as uncertainty that is bleeding through from US markets, with the Presidential election looming large, and megacap earnings not delivering quite what markets had expected.

UK housebuilders and retail stocks embodied the slump among the big-league players in London's trading landscape. The sell-off ensued due to growing anxieties about the Bank of England's looser monetary policy—a move that could spur inflation worries and lending rates hike.

In a notable sector-specific decline, Smith & Nephew (LON: SN), a medical equipment heavyweight, watched its shares plummet by 13% following a profit warning. The company cited challenging operational conditions within the Chinese market as grounds for the downturn. Tough regulatory frameworks and pricing pressures acted as primary contributors to this unexpected forecast revision.

Shell (LON: SHEL), however, emerged as an outlier, gleaming with forecast-beating third-quarter results. Despite a 4% dip in their earnings, which now stand at $6 billion, Shell's performance was robust enough to inspire confidence among investors. Furthermore, the oil giant announced a generous £3.5 billion share buyback program, signaling its financial resilience and commitment to shareholder returns.

The recent sequence of financial reports paints a picture of a market grappling with the dual forces of policy-induced uncertainties and sector-specific hiccups. While Shell's relative success stands as a beacon in these troubled waters, the overarching mood signals investors' increasing caution as they reassess their portfolios in light of the new economic realities.