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FTSE 100 Live 19 February: Glencore and airline stocks fall, BAE and HSBC in results spotlight

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FTSE 100 Live (Evening Standard)
FTSE 100 Live (Evening Standard)

A jump in UK inflation to a 10-month high of 3% today dealt a blow to hopes of early further interest rate cuts.

Banking giant HSBC and BAE Systems are in the spotlight after posting annual results.

Meanwhile, airline stocks have fallen after Jet2’s warning of margin pressure on summer holiday bookings.

FTSE 100 Live Wednesday

  • HSBC unveils cost savings plan

  • BAE Systems order book record

  • Jet2 flags summer margin pressure

Market update: Airlines struggle in FTSE 100, Glencore reviews London listing

10:36 , Graeme Evans

Glencore and airline stocks were among today’s worst performers as investors also digested robust annual results by HSBC and BAE Systems.

The commodity giant slid 5% or 15.9p to 337.7p as weaker energy coal prices meant underlying earnings fell by a bigger-than-forecast 16% to $14.4 billion.

Glencore also sent a chill through the wider London market by revealing it is assessing whether its shares are traded on the right exchange.

The disclosure follows US switches by companies including Flutter Entertainment and CRH, as well as the downgrading of former FTSE 100 miner BHP to a secondary London listing.

Glencore, which listed in 2011, has been trading at its lowest level since 2021 after it paused top-up dividends to focus on reducing post-acquisition debt.

Today’s results included a $1.2 billion base distribution of 10 US cents a share, together with a ‘top-up’ buyback of shares worth $1 billion.

Glencore led the fallers board in a session when Anglo American also lost 1.5% or 41.5p to 2411.5p and Rio Tinto fell by 23.85p to 5057.15p.

The FTSE 100 index, which drifted 3.81 points to 8762.92, was also impacted by the airline sector after Jet2 flagged potential summer margins pressure.

Low-cost carrier and holidays business easyjet retreated 4% and British Airways owner IAG lost 2%, while the AIM-listed shares of Jet2 fell 10% or 161.2p from recent highs to 1403p.

Jet2’s bookings for April, May and June are up by about 7%, but chief executive Steve Heapy said a later booking profile and cost headwinds may mean profit margins in the year ahead “come under some pressure.”

Elsewhere, HSBC and BAE Systems consolidated their recent gains after annual results broadly met City expectations.

Records in the defence and aerospace giant’s figures included an order backlog 11% higher at £77.8 billion and annual sales up 14% at £28.3 billion.

The dividend for the year also lifted 10% as BAE forecast further strong sales growth in the year ahead.

The shares fell 8p to 1328.5p, having risen 15% so far this year on expectations that its order book will continue to swell in the current geopolitical climate.