BoI slides ahead of cost-cutting announcement

Bank of Ireland was the main feature on an otherwise lacklustre Irish stock market yesterday.

Bank of Ireland was the main feature on an otherwise lacklustre Irish stock market yesterday.

Shares in the bank lost seven cent to €12.33 as close to five million shares changed hands ahead of the release of a trading statement today.

While analysts expect the bank to flag a good performance at its Irish banking operations, most of the focus will be on its cost-cutting plans. Up to 2,000 jobs are expected to go as the bank seeks to achieve cost savings of more than €100 million a year.

Elsewhere in the financial sector, volumes were lighter while performance was mixed. AIB climbed by 12 cent to €15.92, Anglo Irish Bank added 15 cent to €20.15, but Irish Life & Permanent gave up 20 cent, or 1.4 per cent, to €13.90.

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Overall, the Irish market finished the day broadly unchanged as international investor sentiment remained wary ahead of a meeting of the US Federal Reserve and against a background of rising oil prices.

Shares in Ryanair, one of the stocks most exposed to oil price fluctuations , slipped by 13 cent or 2.2 per cent to €5.77.

United Drug enjoyed above-average volume with around 2.7 million shares trading as the stock closed three cent lower at €3.40.

Despite the prospect of increased competition in its core cider market from the Scottish & Newcastle-owned Beamish & Crawford, shares in C&C were unchanged on the day at €3.10.

Other movers yesterday included Kerry Group, which added 25 cent to €17.95, and Fyffes, which gained eight cent or 3.7 per cent to €2.22.

In Dublin, Elan shares added eight cent, or 1.5 per cent to €5.58 while in New York, the stock edged up by four cent, or 0.5 per cent, to $7.29 (€5.54).

Waterford Wedgwood shares were again active, adding 13 per cent to €0.04 as investors speculated that the company would launch a major financial restructuring plan to deal with its current difficulties.