UK stocks open 0.8% higher despite vaccine setback

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UK stocks opened higher on Wednesday after investors largely shrugged off news that a leading Covid-19 vaccine trial was put on hold because a recipient developed a serious unexplained illness.

Sentiment was buoyed by some more positive earnings updates and dividend revivals, including from IT group Computacenter.

At 0822, the benchmark FTSE 100 index was up 45.21 points, or 0.8%, at 5.975.51.

AstraZeneca, which is developing a vaccine with Oxford University, said in a statement to media groups that illnesses can happen by chance in large trials, but had to be investigated to ensure the safety of the vaccine.

Shares in the British pharmaceutical company reversed 0.4% to £83.11.

Computacenter rose 3.2% to £22.5022, having resumed dividend payments after first-half profit jumped on Covid-19-related cost cuts and an uptick in revenue.

Computacenter declared an interim dividend of 12.3p per share, up from 10.1p on-year.

Oil company Tullow Oil was having a tougher day, tumbling 15% to 16.6p, as it swung to a deep first-half loss after output and crude prices both fell and it wrote down the value of its assets.

Tullow's pre-tax losses for the six months through June amounted to $1.44bn, compared to a profit of $268.4m on-year. Net debt climbed to $3.02bn.

Also reinstating its dividend was concrete leveling technology supplier Somero Enterprises, which rallied 15% to 239.5p, despite reporting a 29% fall in first-half profit.

Somero reinstated its deferred 2019 final dividend of $0.207 per share. It also declared an interim dividend of $0.04 per share, down 30% on-year, citing a strong financial position.

Music rights investor Hipgnosis Songs Fund was flat at 122p, even as it said it had upped its dividend target to 5.5p per year, citing the reliability of its income and growing global streaming revenues.

Alternative asset and corporate services provider Sanne gained 2.4% to 686.38p on posting a large rise in first-half profit, which it said reflected the resilience of its client book amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

Sanne declared an interim dividend of 4.8p, up 2.1% on-year.

Military equipment supplier Avon Rubber firmed 4.2% to £38.70 on news that it had agreed to acquire helmet group Team Wendy for $130m, while reaffirming earnings guidance.

Team Wendy supplied helmets and helmet liner and retention systems for military and first responder markets.

Fashion retailer Quiz shed 4.7% to 7.1p as its sales slumped 77% in the first five months of its financial year, owing to temporary stores closures and weak consumer confidence.

Advertising company S4 Capital added 0.9% to 363.18p, having swung to a modest first-half profit after acquisitions helped it build its client base and boost revenue.

Gem miner Petra Diamonds dropped 11% to 1.78p on announcing that a law firm had filed court claims accusing the company and its Williamson mine in Tanzania of human rights violations.