FTSE 100 Live 22 November: Games Workshop surges on strong update, retail sales disappoint

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

Household budgets are in focus after October’s retail sales figures showed a sharp fall and Ofgem increased the energy price cap.

The bigger-than-expected 0.7% decline in volumes for last month was blamed on uncertainty ahead of the Budget.

Consumer confidence figures have boosted hopes of a stronger November while Games Workshop and DFS Furniture today posted robust updates.

FTSE 100 Live Friday

  • Retail sales fall amid Budget jitters

  • Games Workshop beats hopes

  • Consumer confidence improves

Euro at two-year low as UK and eurozone activity disappoints

10:17 , Graeme Evans

Private sector activity showed an unexpected contraction in November, according to the latest S&P Global UK Composite PMI.

The headline reading of 49.9 is marginally below the 50 no change threshold and compared with a figure of 51.8 in October and City forecasts of about 52.

The decline was broad-based after a contraction in manufacturing activity and flat performance in services.

It follows tax hikes announced in the Budget and caution over the potential for new tariffs in a Trump administration.

In Europe, the flash composite PMI fell to 48.1 in November from 50 in October.

The euro fell to $1.035 following the release, its lowest level against the US dollar in two years.

Market update: Games Workshop in strong advance, banking stocks lower

09:54 , Graeme Evans

A stronger session for UK stocks was today dominated by Games Workshop after an update by the Warhammer figurines firm boosted shares by 14%.

The company is now worth £4.4 billion - boosting its chances of promotion to the FTSE 100 index - after an updated estimate of results for the six months to 1 December showed core revenues growth of 11% to not less than £260 million.

The advance comes despite comparisons with last year’s launch of Warhammer 40,000, as well as currency headwinds. Licensing revenue of not less than £30 million is sharply higher following the launch of the Space Marine 2 video game.

The company is based in Nottingham but about three-quarters of sales are now generated outside the UK, served by logistics hubs in Tennessee and Sydney.

House broker Peel Hunt said the hobby was in excellent health following the “exceptional” first performance. It retained its Buy rating on the stock, which this morning surged another 1,620p to a record 13,330p.

AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould added: “Games Workshop controls everything from design to sales, allowing efficient cost optimisation and pricing control.

“It continues to be a unique business on the UK market and that has helped it attract a premium valuation.”