London Markets: Shares in London Stock Exchange fall as Nvidia’s Arm deal collapses, while Ocado slumps on results

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London equities were modestly in the black on Tuesday, helped by mining stocks, but shares of Ocado Group plunged on its earnings results and shares in the London Stock Exchange dropped after a $40 billion deal for Arm Holdings fell apart.

The FTSE 100 index
UKX,
+0.01%

again outperformed the Stoxx Europe 600
SXXP,
-0.06%
,
but just barely, as another choppy day was building for Wall Street. The pound
GBPUSD,
+0.05%

was about 0.1% weaker.

Ocado stock tumbled 12% after the online grocer reported a much wider pretax loss for fiscal 2021, and said it would return to mid-teens percentage revenue growth in 2022. Revenue was in line with forecasts, and driven by a 22.4% rise in customer numbers.

The company flagged rising costs, due to investments including its “Re:Imagined” technology, and expects international losses to remain at the same level, said Citi analysts Nick Coulter and Viraj Brahmbhatt.

As a consequence, we expect FY22E consensus EBITDA to move toward £55-60m from £92m. While we expect the unit economics of the ‘Re:Imagined’ technology (carbon printed robots) to be an unequivocal positive, we expect the shares to react negatively to the near-term downgrade,” the pair said.

Shares of Oslo-based rival AutoStore Holdings
AUTO,
+4.49%

rose 3.8%.

Elsewhere, miners were up a second day, with Anglo American
AAL,
+2.99%
,
Rio Tinto
RIO,
-0.29%

RIO,
+1.38%
,
Evraz
EVR,
+1.27%

and Glencore
GLEN,
+1.54%

all rising by 1% or more.

Another mover was the London Stock Exchange
LSEG,
-2.92%
,
with those shares down 2.5% after Nvidia’s planned $40 billion acquisition for Softbank’s chip designer Arm Holdings fell apart.

Softbank said it would instead seek an initial public offering of Arm, and speculation that listing will take place in New York instead of London hit LSE shares.

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