Royal Mail to cut deliveries under regulator proposals; Shell hikes investor payouts – business live


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Germany’s Dax stock market index is also in on the party with a new record high, while Spain’s Ibex benchmark is at its highest since 2008, before the Eurozone crisis crunched its economy for a decade.

Spain’s stock market has risen strongly in the last couple of years, as the country has become the surprise leader of the European economy – with a growth rate far outstripping the EU’s largest economy, Germany.

However, the stock market has a long way to go before it surpasses that level, pumped up by the country’s housing bubble.

Spain’s stock market has hit its highest since 2008. Photograph: Refinitiv

The biggest gainer on the FTSE 100 is telecoms company Airtel Africa. Its share price rose 7.2% after it reported a 20% increase in revenues for the first nine months of its financial year.

It is vying with St James’s Place, after the wealth manager enjoyed stronger inflows. Reuters reported:

Posts record funds under management of £190.21bn at 2024-end, above analysts’ views of £187.4bn, according to company-compiled consensus.

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European stocks hit new record high

It has started off as a fairly mild trading day across European stock markets. All the major indices have gained ground in early trading. But that has still pushed the Euro Stoxx 600 index to its latest record high.

The Stoxx 600 reached 535.9 points on Thursday morning. It has risen from below 500 in mid-December as investors expect the European Central Bank to act to support the economy.

The FTSE 100 is up by 0.1%, or eight points, at 8,566.3. That leaves it 20 points short of its all-time high of 8,586.68 from a week ago. Could the ECB also help it to a new record later?

European stock markets gained ground on Thursday morning. Photograph: Refinitiv

Royal Mail to deliver on alternate days; Shell profits down

Good morning, and welcome to our live coverage of business, economics and financial markets.

Royal Mail is set to be allowed to deliver second-class letters only on alternate weekdays and not on Saturdays after the industry regulator announced a shake-up of postal service rules.

Communications regulator Ofcom has proposed that Royal Mail would still be required to deliver first-class letters six days a week and the price cap on second-class stamps would remain, but the company will be allowed to make cost savings by cutting the number of days it goes to every address.

The changes could save Royal Mail between £250m and £425m each year. The cuts would be a boon to Czech billionaire Daniel Křetínský’s EP Group, as it nears a £3.6bn takeover of Royal Mail’s FTSE 250-listed parent company, International Distribution Services.

Shell profits fall, but investor payouts rise

Shell has handed its investors a multibillion-dollar windfall despite reporting weaker than expected profits of $23.7bn for last year as global oil and gas prices tumbled.

Shareholders of Europe’s biggest oil company are in line for a 4% dividend hike alongside share buybacks of $3.5bn for the last three months of the year.

This marks the thirteenth consecutive quarter in which Shell has handed its investors buy backs of more than $3bn, despite falling earnings from its oil and gas.

European Central Bank expected to cut interest rates

The European Central Bank, led by Christine Lagarde, is widely expected to cut interest rates today in an effort to support economic growth.

We will get a good picture of the economy’s momentum this morning, with Eurozone GDP figures.

Reuters reported:

The European Central Bank is all but certain to cut interest rates on Thursday and is likely to keep open the door to further policy easing as concerns over lacklustre economic growth supersede worries about persistent inflation.

The agenda

  • 9am GMT: Germany GDP growth (fourth quarter; previous: 0.1% quarter-on-quarter; consensus: -0.1%)

  • 10am GMT: Eurozone GDP growth (fourth quarter; prev.: 0.4% ; cons.: 0.1%)

  • 1:15pm GMT: European Central Bank interest rate decision

  • 1:30pm GMT: US GDP growth (fourth quarter; prev.: 3.1% annualised; cons.: 2.6%)

  • 1:45pm GMT: ECB press conference

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