The FTSE 100 fell on Monday as losses in the energy, financial and consumer-facing sectors offset gains in mining shares. News that Omicron had become the dominant variant in London and claimed its first casualty dented investor confidence.

At the close the FTSE 100 of leading shares was down almost 1% at 7,231.

COMPANY NEWS

Outsourcing firm Capita (CPI) posted a rise of just 1% in group revenues for the 11 months to November as Covid continued to impact some of its businesses and it saw lower sales in its Experience division, sending its shares to the bottom of the FTSE 250 loserboard, down 18.7% to 36.8p.

On a positive note, the firm continued to strengthen its balance sheet with the sale of its Secure Solutions and Services division and its specialist insurance business, bringing disposal proceeds to £620 million against a target of £700 million by next June.

Infrastructure firm Costain (COST) confirmed its guidance for full year operating profit and said year-end net cash would be above market expectations.

However, its bust-up with National Grid continues to rumble on with the firm now conceding it expects the contract to result in an overall cash outflow, sending the shares down 7.4% to 47.9p.

Homewares retailer Dunelm (DNLM) said it had ‘continued to see strong trading momentum’ in the second quarter and would update the market on the key Christmas selling period in mid-January.

The shares dropped 2.3% to £13.24 after the firm also revealed chief financial officer Laura Carr would leave for pastures new next June.

There was happier news from geotechnical contractor Keller (KLR) which announced its Texas-based subsidiary RECON had won a $160 million contract for the development of an energy facility on the US Gulf Coast, lifting the shares 0.9% to 912p.

The firm called the two-year contract ‘a notable win’ and said it saw ‘significant potential for further similar projects in the US especially along the Gulf Coast region’.

Shares in online estate agency Purplebricks (PURP) collapsed 21% to 25p after the firm announced a delay to its half year results which were due tomorrow after discovering a 'process issue' with deposit registrations.

The company said it was putting aside up to £9 million to cover potential future claims, although one source put the potential costs much higher.

Specialist staffing firm SThree (STEM) posted a positive trading update for the year to November with group net fees up 25% in the final three months marking three consecutive quarters of above-20% growth.

Net fee income in the fourth quarter was also 16% above the same period of 2019, demonstrating the firm’s ability to grow during the Covid crisis, although investors sought to book profits after the 80%-plus rise in the shares this year, leaving the stock 13.2% lower at 474p.

Infection control company Tristel (TSTL:AIM) released a trading update saying it expected first half revenues of more than £15 million, similar to last year’s figure once inventory adjustments were taken into account. The shares dropped 1% to 480p.

FOR A LIST OF FTSE 100 RISERS AND FALLERS SEE HERE

Find out how to deal online from £1.50 in a SIPP, ISA or Dealing account. AJ Bell logo

Issue Date: 13 Dec 2021