Markets boosted by news of coronavirus vaccine progress

In Dublin, Ryanair Holdings among shares to gain on hopeful Covid-19 news

A health professional prepares a needle during human trials for a Covid-19 vaccine in Brisbane, Australia. Photograph: Glenn Hunt/EPA
A health professional prepares a needle during human trials for a Covid-19 vaccine in Brisbane, Australia. Photograph: Glenn Hunt/EPA

Good news from Covid-19 vaccine trials boosted markets on Wednesday. Both US group Moderna and the University of Oxford-Astrazeneca joint venture reported progress on their efforts to find a way of inoculating against the virus.

DUBLIN

Ryanair Holdings shares took off as hopes grew that a Covid-19 vaccine may not be far off, easing pressure on European and global carriers. The airline group's stock closed up 9.84 per cent at €11.83 after touching €11.93 shortly before trade ended.

Traders said investors plunged on airline and travel stocks following positive reports from the coronavirus vaccine trials.

International building materials group and index heavyweight CRH added 2.56 per cent to €33.30 as the news also lifted construction-related stocks around the world.

READ MORE

Betting companies benefited similarly. Paddy Power owner Flutter Entertainment gained 4.38 per cent to €127.55 as the market backed the sector.

AIB advanced 1.95 per cent to €1.15 while its peer Bank of Ireland gained 3.69 per cent to €1.825. Dealers observed that Irish lenders remained volatile.

House builder Cairn Homes added 1.64 per cent to 87 cent. Its competitor Glenveagh Properties rose 1.43 per cent to 71 cent.

Office developer Hibernia Real Estate Investment Trust (Reit) inched 0.18 per cent up to €1.102. Landlord Irish Residential Properties Reit dipped 0.71 per cent to €1.40.

With little corporate news, dealers said investors in Irish stocks reacted mainly to the coronavirus vaccine reports.

LONDON

Pharmaceutical group Astrazeneca rose almost 6 per cent to 9,053.23p following reports in a medical journal that it would publish positive results on a potential coronavirus vaccine it has licensed from the University of Oxford Grafton added 2.76 per cent to 6.88p on generally positive sentiment towards construction-related stocks. The group's shares are traded in London.

Aer Lingus and British Airways owner International Consolidated Airlines Group climbed 10.72 per cent to 229.3p. Easyjet added 6.4 per cent to 691.6p. Both gained as travel businesses proved popular with investors on Wednesday.

GVC, parent of bookies Ladbrokes and Coral, gained 5.23 per cent to close at 913.4p.

Luxury goods maker Burberry shed 5.6 per cent to 1,470p after saying it would axe 500 jobs in Britain and elsewhere to save £55 million.

EUROPE

Italian cement maker and CRH rival Buzzi Unicem rose 5.42 per cent to €21.21 as the construction sector lifted on positive vaccine news.

Air France KLM advanced 6.7 per cent to €4.36, while Lufthansa gained 9.73 per cent to €9.32 on the back of the rush to support aviation stocks.

German breathing equipment and medical equipment maker Drägerwerk surged 11.28 per cent to €86.80 after upping guidance on its likely financial performance this year.

Dutch micro-chip maker ASML Holding fell 3.67 per cent to €330.70 despite reporting increased second-quarter profits and sticking by previous forecasts for this year.

Germany’s benchmark Dax increased by 1.84 per cent, while the French equivalent, the CAC, moved 2.03 per cent higher.

US

Drug maker Moderna’s shares surged by more than 12 per cent shortly after positive results from its initial coronavirus vaccine trials, but it had shed more than half those gains by 6pm Irish time, when its stock was 5.66 per cent ahead at $79.33 US dollars.

Wall Street gained as reports of the positive data emerged. Goldman Sachs added 1.4 per cent when it revealed that second-quarter trading revenue doubled. Morgan Stanley gained 0.6 per cent and Bank of America 1.1 per cent ahead of their results on Thursday, which would wrap up earnings from the big six US banks. The broader banking index added 2 per cent.

UnitedHealth Group fell 0.3 per cent after warning of rising costs later this year as Americans catch up on less urgent surgeries halted by the coronavirus pandemic. Additional reporting: Reuters

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O’Halloran covers energy, construction, insolvency, and gaming and betting, among other areas