FTSE 100 Live 07 November: Interest rates set to fall, BT and ITV shares under pressure

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

In This Article:

Interest rate decisions and a packed diary of corporate results mean another hectic session in financial markets.

As well as expected cuts in borrowing costs, the Bank of England and Federal Reserve will update their guidance on the economic outlook.

BT Group, Rolls-Royce, Sainsbury’s and ITV are among the high-profile companies reporting today.

FTSE 100 Live Thursday

  • BT cuts revenues guidance

  • Grocery sales power Sainsbury's

  • Interest rates set to fall

Market update: BT and Auto Trader struggle, Rolls-Royce momentum stalls

10:37 , Graeme Evans

A fresh setback for BT and negative reactions to updates by Sainsbury’s and Rolls-Royce today soured the mood ahead of another Bank of England interest rate cut.

The FTSE 100 index stood 10.88 points higher at 8177.56, well short of benchmarks in Europe and despite the 3% post-election bounce seen on Wall Street last night.

London’s jittery performance came ahead of policy statements by the Bank of England and Federal Reserve. Rates are forecast to fall by 0.25% to 4.75% in both cases, with the outlook for cuts in 2025 likely to be the bigger interest for traders.

Companies will welcome some clarity on borrowing costs after a period of uncertainty caused by the Budget and the US election.

BT Group shares fell 6% today after reporting a second quarter revenues decline of 3.1%. This included a 7% drop in the Business division, while the Consumer arm fell 2%.

The performance caused BT to scale back revenues guidance for the year, although it left estimates for profit and cash flow untouched.

Its roll out of full-fibre broadband also continues at an impressive pace after the Openreach arm reached another 2.1 million premises in the half-year.

Today’s decline of 7.9p to 134.2p returns shares to where they were in August.

AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould said: “Chief executive Allison Kirkby faces a difficult task in simplifying and streamlining BT, which with its expensive foray into sports rights in the mid-2010s overextended itself, but she has at least made progress in getting costs and spending under control.”

Rolls-Royce shares have enjoyed another strong year, although they fell back from record levels today after the engines giant released a third quarter update.

It reiterated guidance for profits and cash flow in 2024 while engine flying hours are at 102% of pre-pandemic levels. This is towards the lower end of the forecast range of 100%-110%, contributing to today’s fall 4% or 24.4p to 549.6p.

The shares of Sainsbury’s fell 2% or 6.2p to 261.6p, despite the retailer’s half-year results revealing another strong performance in Grocery. The division’s sales rose 5%, while the second quarter saw improved performances in General Merchandise and at Argos.