Spread bets and CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 68.7% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading spread bets and CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how spread bets and CFDs work, and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Close
Search
EN
Hi, user_no_name
Live Chat

Darktrace to be acquired by US private equity firm as FTSE 100 rallies

 

Green and Pleasant Land? FTSE 100 Index Books New High

Something has come loose in the UK market — like a hose pipe that was blocked up suddenly gushing forth. Another deal was announced today for cybersecurity firm Darktrace and another record high for the FTSE 100 index. Nick Train suggested a transformative deal could unleash pent-up demand for UK stocks and close the valuation gap – maybe BHP’s move on Anglo-American is just such a deal.

The FTSE 100 index rose to a new intraday high of 8,139.92 this morning as European indices were broadly higher on some better news from US tech giants Microsoft and Alphabet.

But it’s the same story; an undervalued UK asset is being taken out. Darktrace is to go private. The company has not been happy about being listed in London. "Darktrace's operating and financial achievements have not been reflected commensurately in its valuation with shares trading at a significant discount to its global peer group,” management said.

US private equity group Thoma Bravo is paying 620p in cash for Darktrace — a 20% premium on last night’s closing share price of 517p. Darktrace shares are up close to 17.5% on the news, trading at 607.20p around midday on April 26.

Darktrace shares have gained over 65% year-to-date so far and are up 116.8% on a 12-month basis.

And on the BHP acquisition – Anglo has rejected the offer saying it “significantly undervalues” the business and would be “highly unattractive” to shareholders. Of course, it did – they always do. Shares fell a measly 1% to £25.34 — this is far from over.

 

Choose your points of movement

Сalculate your hypothetical P/L (aggregated cost and charges) if you had opened a trade today.

Market

Shares Search
Shares
Spread Betting
Currency
Index
ETFs
Commodity

Instrument

Search
Clear input
Philip Morris
Tesla
Adidas
Fedex
MercadoLibre.com
Starbucks
JD.com
Citigroup
BPetroleum
General Motors
CrowdStrike Holdings
Walt Disney
Artemis Resouces LTD
Snap
Eni
Pinterest
NVIDIA
Verizon Comm
Air France-KLM
Christian Dior
Lufthansa
Lloyds
Meta (Formerly Facebook)
Salesforce.com
Deutsche Bank
Marriott
Medtronic
Bellway
Target
Kraft Heinz
Microsoft
Siemens
Shopify
Broadcom
Comcast
Lockheed Martin
Volkswagen
TUI AG (LSE)
Conoco Phillips
easyJet
Berkshire Hathaway
Alphabet (Google)
Home Depot
RioTinto
Adobe
Evraz
UnitedHealth
Allianz
Spotify
Diageo
Loreal
IAG
Rolls-Royce
Pfizer
UniCredit
Deere
British American Tobacco
Santander
Nasdaq
Bristol Myers
Intel
MasterCard
AbbVie
JPMorgan Chase
Cisco Systems
Netflix
UPS
Moderna Inc
Amgen
Costco
American Express
Chipotle
Schlumberger
Qualcomm
Boeing Co
HSBC
AIRBUS GROUP
Micron Technology
LVMH
Ford
Wal-Mart Stores
IBM
Chevron
Accenture
Lyft
HubSpot
Porsche
Gilead Sciences
PepsiCo
Canopy Growth
Thermo Fisher
Caterpillar
McDonald's
Blackrock
General Electric
Alibaba
EXXON
Porsche AG
eBay
MerckCo USA
Visa
Unilever
DeltaAir
Barclays
Amazon.com
Shell plc (LSE)
Cellnex
Apple
AT&T
Uber
PayPal
Abbott
Occidental
Hermes
Vodafone
Twilio
Eli Lilly
Bank of America
American Airlines
Procter & Gamble
Oracle
SAP
Bayer
AMD
Mondelez
Johnson & Johnson
Wells Fargo
ASML
TUI (Xetra)
Nio
AstraZeneca
LUCID
Campari
Nike
Square
Coca-Cola Co (NYSE)
Morgan Stanley
Goldman Sachs
Baidu
Inditex

Account Type

Direction

Quantity

Amount must be equal or higher than

Amount should be less than

Amount should be a multiple of the minimum lots increment

USD Down
$-

Value

$-

Commission

$-

Spread

-

Leverage

-

Conversion Fee

$-

Required Margin

$-

Overnight Swaps

$-
Start Trading

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.

All positions on instruments denominated in a currency that is different from your account currency, will be subject to a conversion fee at the position exit as well.

 

Bank of Japan Digs in Heels

The Bank of Japan knows how to disappoint. It stuck to its guns and failed to offer any real guidance on the path of future rate hikes – hardly shock and awe stuff. Consumer price inflation data from the Tokyo area came in softer than expected, notching a notable deceleration in April.

The Japanese yen declined further with USDJPY above 156 now. Where is this “line in the sand”?

 

Bank of Japan Digs in Heels

 

Stagflation? What’s Next?

Yesterday’s GDP report from the US was messy. Growth slowed more than expected, but inflation was hotter than forecast. GDP expanded 1.6% in the first quarter, well below the 2.4% anticipated. Core PCE accelerated to 3.7%.

The quarterly core PCE implies a m/m rise of 50 bps to be reported today. That is well above the 0.3 expected and could call for Jay Powell to sound more hawkish next week. The market shifted its full cut from Nov to Dec and the likelihood of the Fed leaving rates unchanged this year has risen to 20%. Yields popped higher with the US 10-year north of 4.7% for the first time since early November.

Was that really a stagflation report? The big question is what does it mean and what does the Fed do with it? 

New podcast out now – does geopolitics really matter to markets?

 

US Stocks Stumble, S&P 500 Declines

Stocks fell with the S&P 500 down half a per cent, weighed also by a 10% drop for Meta. Meanwhile Alphabet shares shot 10% higher overnight and Microsoft was up 4% in after-hours trading following earnings – these are big, big moves for trillion-dollar stocks.

We are definitely at a point where the AI stuff is proving hard to value because the earnings profiles are becoming more uncertain.

 

Interest Rate Cuts Closer Than Anticipated?

Soft GDP suggests rate cuts are back on, but hot inflation and employment market data suggest otherwise — today’s faster PCE data will be eyed with laser focus. And it seems to be the inflation reignition that has caught the market’s attention more than the softness in the growth figures.

In the near-term it’s unclear – bulls and bears alike can take something from it – we need to hear from the Fed. Higher inflation per unit of growth takes the goldilocks soft landing scenario off the table – the Fed will have to make a decision. It’s also a fact now that the 6% budget deficit in the US is all that is keeping the economy afloat.

 Growth was down to its weakest in two years.

Soft GDP suggests rate cuts

Core PCE reaccelerates:

Core PCE reaccelerates

 


When considering shares, indices, forex (foreign exchange) and commodities for trading and price predictions, remember that trading CFDs involves a significant degree of risk and could result in capital loss.

Past performance is not indicative of any future results. This information is provided for informative purposes only and should not be construed to be investment advice.

Latest news

“Seismic win” for Labour in Blackpool South in “catastrophic” night for the Conservatives

Thursday, 2 May 2024

Indices

“Extinction-level” event for the Conservatives?

Bank of England eyeing interest rate cuts while Australia’s RBA may hike

Wednesday, 1 May 2024

Indices

Week ahead: Will the Bank of England cut interest rates?

Fed stands pat on interest rates, Powell says no “progress” on inflation in Q1

Wednesday, 1 May 2024

Indices

Fed stands pat as “progress” on US inflation stalled

Shell stock rises after better-than-expected earnings in Q1

Wednesday, 1 May 2024

Indices

Shell stock rises on Q1 earnings beat, share buyback

Live Chat