House prices forecast to fall in 2024, Naked Wines slashes costs

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FTSE 100 Live (Evening Standard)

Pressure on house prices is set to continue in 2024 after the country’s biggest lender today forecast a decline of between 2% and 4% next year.

Halifax released its outlook statement a day after the Bank of England warned that UK interest rates will stay in restrictive territory for an extended period.

Markets remain hopeful that interest rates will fall next year, a stance fuelled by the tone of this week’s US Federal Reserve policy announcement.

FTSE 100 Live Friday

Miners in demand as FTSE 100 rises, Trainline up 17%

08:44 , Graeme Evans

Share price gains by miners and energy companies have kept the FTSE 100 index in positive territory after yesterday’s 1.3% improvement.

London’s top flight is up 7.97 points at 7,656.95, led by Glencore up 10.5p to 464.3p, Anglo American 34.8p higher at 1830.2p and Shell up 17.5p to 2537.5p.

The progress follows recent dollar weakness, with the pound at $1.275 this morning.

Among the blue-chip fallers, British Gas owner Centrica lost 1.2p to 142.75p after SocGen analysts removed their “buy” recommendation.

The FTSE 250 index followed yesterday’s 3% rise by adding another 115.06 points to 19,372.02, with Trainline up 17% or 63.2p to 347.4p after Barclays gave the online ticketing firm an improved target price of 355p.

House prices to fall by 2-4% in 2024 despite expected interest rate cuts, Halifax says

08:24 , Daniel O’Boyle

House prices across the UK are set to fall by between 2% and 4% in 2024, according to the country’s top mortgage lender Halifax, a steeper fall than we saw in 2023.

The average house price in the UK is at £283,615 after the property market proved surprisingly resilient in 2023, with average prices only down by 1%. Director of Halifax Mortgages Kim Kinnaird, however, noted that prices did fall more quickly in the middle of the year, before recovering in recent months.

She said: “To some extent this masks the fluctuations we’ve seen in the housing market throughout 2023. As wider economic headwinds began to bite, house prices fell for six consecutive months between April and September, before rising again later in the year as prospects improved.”

Read more here

Consumer confidence improves in December

07:45 , Graeme Evans

GfK’s consumer confidence index for December has improved to minus 22, up two points on last month and a big jump of 20 points on the score ahead of last Christmas.

All five sub-measures rose, with the one relating to personal finance situations over the next 12 months up by one point to minus two. This compares with minus 29 a year earlier,

The major purchases index improved by one point to minus 23 and the question assessing the general economic situation over the next 12 months by five points to minus 44.

The overall caution in the survey comes with interest rates at a 15-year high and price rises continuing to erode disposable income.

Naked Wines slashes costs after going concern warning

07:45 , Daniel O’Boyle

Online wine seller Naked Wines has slashed costs and intends to cut them further as it aims to recover from a slide in sales that led to questions about its ability to stay afloat.

As revealed earlier this year, the business made a loss of £9.7 million in the six months to 2 October as sales fell by 20%, leading the company to warn their were questions about its ability to continue as a going concern. Last month, it warned that US sales had fallen further in the weeks since.

But executive chair Rowan Gormley, who took over CEO duties as Nick Devlin left the role last month, said the business was starting to get things back on track.

He said: “We are moving towards a period of sustained cash generation. We have taken out £3 million of cost with £10 million more to come and expect to generate £40-50 million of cash from inventory over the next 18 months. In addition we have made good progress with testing an enhanced customer proposition to restore us to growth. I want to thank our people, our winemakers and our customers for their support and reiterate our determination to make sure that they are rewarded for it.”

The business continues to warn that under a “severe but plausible downside scenario” its status as a going concern would be at risk.

FTSE 100 set to consolidate 1.3% rise, Hang Seng up 2%

07:24 , Graeme Evans

The FTSE 100 index is today expected to consolidate the gains seen yesterday on the back of rate cut projections by the US Federal Reserve.

London’s top flight closed 1.3% higher last night, even though the Bank of England and European Central Bank warned their rates will stay in restrictive territory for a long time yet.

Rate-sensitive stocks such as Persimmon and Land Securities closed about 6% higher as traders bet that the Federal Reserve’s latest dot plot projections marked a turning point in global monetary policy.

Wall Street shares held on to their gains of the previous session as the S&P 500 index last night closed up 0.3% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average crept further into record territory.

CMC Markets expects the FTSE 100 index to open 12 points higher at 7661, with attention focused on this morning’s preliminary PMI readings from various European economies.

In Asia, the Hang Seng index rose 2% but the Shanghai Composite lost 0.5%. Figures earlier showed China industrial production rose by a bigger-than-expected 6.6% in November, the fastest annual pace since February 2022.

Recap: Yesterday’s top stories

Thursday 14 December 2023 23:21 , Simon Hunt

Good morning from the City desk of the Evening Standard.

It’s back! After a prolonged Covid hiatus the notorious City Spy has finally made a return, reincarnated as a newsletter, and we couldn’t be more excited for its relaunch.

We’ve got dozens of great stories lined up for you over the next few weeks, so do be sure to subscribe for the latest gossip, scoops, rumours and gaffes from around the Square Mile and beyond. This newsletter will go out every Thursday and you’ll see the best bits in a weekly column in the paper on Fridays.

Sign up here: https://www.standard.co.uk/newsletters

Our stories from this week’s newsletter include:

Here’s a summary of our top business stories from yesterday:

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