FTSE strides higher as confidence improves

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UK markets added to their gains on Thursday as the latest business confidence indicator from the Recruitment & Employment Confederation showed an improvement in May compared to April.

As well as an uptick in overall confidence, short-term demand for permanent staff also improved. 'The worst could be behind us', said REC chief executive Neil Carberry.

By midday the FTSE 100 was up 0.6% to 6,183 while the FTSE 250 traded up 0.9% at 17,215.

Pharmaceuticals were the main gainers, with Hikma topping the leader board up 6% to £25.99 followed by AstraZeneca up 3.8% to £86.43.

Asset manager M&G rose for a second day, climbing another 5,.5% to 148p, after confirming its ordinary and special dividends yesterday.

EasyJet rose 3.8% to 735p as the budget airline announced it would cut its workforce by up to 30% as it seeks to reduce the size of its fleet.

It also warned that demand would likely only return to pre-pandemic levels in about three years.

On the losing side were Asia-focused banks HSBC and Standard Chartered, down 3.7% to 382p and 4.9% to 391p respectively as China-US tensions mounted over Hong Kong.

MID-CAP MOVERS

On the FTSE 250, shares in Cineworld rose 20% to 93p on the news that the leisure group expected to reopen all cinemas by July and that it had struck a deal with its lenders to ease the terms of its debt arrangements.

Workspace operator IWG jumped 15% to 300p on the news it has raised gross proceeds of approximately £320m through a heavily discounted equity placing.

Thermal processing specialist Bodycote was 7.8% higher at 637p despite announcing that revenue fell 30% in April as its businesses outside of China experienced the biggest impact from the Covid-19 crisis since the third week of March.

Stagecoach accelerated 4.4% to 72.8p as it reported a significant increase in available liquidity to £814m, higher than the £308m reported in its statement of 3 April, due to new borrowing capacity.

However chief executive Martin Griffiths sounded a note of caution, warning of the 'lasting effect' of the COVID-19 pandemic on travel patterns.

PayPoint shares added 3% to 744p as it reported pre-tax profit excluding exceptional items increased 5.6% to £56.8m in the year ended 31 March 2020 following its decision to cancel management bonuses in light of Covid-19.

The company announced it would recommend a final dividend of 15.6 pence per share.

Among AIM stocks, online fashion retailer Boohoo was buoyed 16% to 390p as it acquired the remaining 34% stake in subsidiary prettylittlething.com for up to £323.8m.

Newspaper group Daily Mail and General Trust lost 4.8% to 714p after it reported a sharp fall in profit as lost revenue following the sale of its property information business and the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic weighed on growth.

For the six months ended 31 March 2020, pre-tax profit fell 44% to £56m on-year and revenue was down 5% to £690m.