FTSE 100 Live 30 January: BT shares fall as revenues disappoint, Fevertree in Molson Coors tie-up

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

BT and Shell shares are in the spotlight at the start of the FTSE 100 results season.

The oil giant boosted shareholder returns despite weaker earnings, while BT shares came under pressure amid disappointing revenue trends.

In other developments, Fevertree announced a US partnership with Molson Coors and struggling Mulberry unveiled a “back to British basics” reboot.

FTSE 100 Live Thursday

  • BT revenues miss City target

  • Fevertree unveils Molson Coors deal

  • Shell earnings fall, lifts dividend

Market update: BT shares lower on revenue fears, US deal boosts Serco

10:31 , Graeme Evans

A results-day setback for BT shareholders today offset progress elsewhere as another big distribution of cash by Shell kept the FTSE 100 index near a record.

The oil giant’s fourth quarter earnings fell sharply due to weaker energy prices and margins, meaning the overall haul for 2024 declined to $23.7 billion.

But with better-than-expected levels of cash generation, the company upped its dividend by 4% and announced the 13th consecutive quarter of buying back at least $3 billion of its shares.

Shell lifted 13.5p to 2608.5p as the heavyweight stock played its part in lifting the FTSE 100 index by 19.27 points to within sight of its record at 8577.08.

Other blue-chip risers in a busy session for year-end updates included St James’s Place, which jumped 8.5% or 79p to 1008p after reporting 13% growth in funds under management.

Net inflows of £4.3 billion were better than expected as the wealth manager’s stock market valuation continues to recover after last year’s slump.

Airtel Africa also fared well, surging 13.8p to its highest level in more than two years at 146.8p. This followed plans for a further $100 million buyback of shares, alongside strong third quarter results.

The reception for the telecoms and mobile money services firm was in contrast to the one for BT Group, which topped the FTSE 100 fallers board after its results.

A 3% fall in revenues to £5.2 billion was bigger than expected, offset by underlying earnings stronger than forecast due to one-offs and cost savings.

BT reiterated guidance for this year and the medium term but shares fell 3.2p to 142.8p.

UBS, which has a Sell stance on the stock, said: “We think revenue pressures will build over the coming quarters amid lower CPI-linked price rises and rising broadband infrastructure competition.”

Other fallers in the FTSE 100 include Sage as investors used a first quarter update as an opportunity to lock in profits with shares near a record high.

The cloud-based accounting software company dipped 18.5p to 1318p, having reiterated full-year guidance following a 9% rise in first quarter revenues.