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FTSE 100 gains trimmed with sterling on the march

StockMarketWire.com

Amid hopes Boris Johnson's trip to Brussels will yield success on a Brexit deal, the pound was higher which helped constrain gains for the FTSE 100, off its highs for the day by midday at 6,578.62, a 0.3% rise.

Security company G4S edged up fractionally to 256.2p after it accepted a sweetened £3.8 billion takeover bid from rival Allied Universal.

Allied offered 245p per G4S share, higher than its previous 210p effort and trumping a rival bid from Garda World of 235p.

Tobacco giant British American Tobacco shed 0.3% to £28.93, despite forecasting annual revenue at the high end of its guidance range amid an improved outlook on sales volumes.

BAT said its constant currency adjusted revenue growth was now expected to be at the high end of a 1-to-3% range.

Supermarket group Tesco rose 1.3% to 227.4p on announcing that it would complete a planned $10.6 billion sale of businesses in Thailand and Malaysia later this month, now that all regulatory approvals were in the bag.

Tesco intends to return about £5 billion of the proceeds to shareholders via a special dividend, which was expected to be paid out on or around 26 February. It also would pay £2.5 billion to its pension scheme.

Infrastructure group Balfour Beatty climbed 1% to 271p after it flagged a resumption of dividend payments and the launch a £50 million stock buyback from January, having lifting its order guidance.

Kitchen and joinery products supplier Howden Joinery rallied 7.1% to 687.4p as it upgraded its profit outlook, citing a continued strong performance since a previous update on 2 November.

Howden Joinery now expected pre-tax profit to be around 10% above the top end of current analyst forecasts of £123 million to £152 million.

Enterprise software company Sage gained 1.2% to 571.3p following news it had agreed to sell its Polish business to funds advised by Mid Europa Partners for around £66 million.

House builder Vistry firmed 6.4% to 918p on announcing that it would consider reinstating a 'modest' final dividend for 2020, potentially bringing forward previous plans for an interim 2021 reinstatement.

Vistry also reiterated guidance for a pre-tax profit for the year through December at the top end of a £130 million-to-£140 million range.

Plastics producer Victrex dipped 0.4% to £21.04, even as it reported a 39% fall in annual profit after the pandemic crimped demand in end markets including automotive and medical.

Victrex, however, also reinstated its dividend citing a resilient cash position. It would pay a final dividend of 46.14p per share.

Bus and train operator Stagecoach added 11.6% to 82.6p, despite reporting a steep fall in first-half profit and scrapping its interim dividend as the pandemic crunched demand for public transport.

Pre-tax profit for the six months through September dropped to £5.4 million, down from £65.9 million year-on-year.

Stagecoach said the fact that it was able to remain profitable reflected management actions to respond to Covid-19 and support from government and local authorities.

Photobooth and laundry services group Photo-Me International dropped 2.2% to 57.6p on guiding for a 26% fall in first-half revenue as the pandemic shrank footfall in the busy locations that host its booths and children's rides.

Photo-Me also said it planned to remove 4,900 photobooths across the globe to adjust to the drop in demand.

Auto dealer Marshall Motor advanced 4.7% to 139.78p as it upgraded its annual profit guidance, even after another temporary closure of its showrooms.

Story provided by StockMarketWire.com