The FTSE 100 is up 1 per cent in early trading. Among the companies with reports and trading updates today are BP, Wayve and IWG. Read Tuesday 7 May Business Live blog below.

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Market open: FTSE 100 up 1.2%; FTSE 250 adds 0.8%

The FTSE 100 has opened at yet another record high, boosted by gains in Shell after Reuters reported its plans to sell the Malaysian gas station business and BP gained on maintaining share buyback plans but missed earnings forecast.

Shell has jumped 1.6 per cent after Reuters reported the energy giant is in talks to sell its gas station business in Malaysia to Saudi Aramco.

BP has edged 0.4 per cent higher after the oil major maintained the rate of its share buyback programme at $1.75billion over the next three months but missed forecasts due to lower oil and gas prices and a US refinery outage.

Homebuilders are up 1.4 per cent on Halifax data showing British house prices edged higher in April.

Medical equipment and services is the only sector trading in the red, down 0.2 per cent.

BP shares open lower after profit miss

Adam Vettese, analyst at eToro:

‘Consistency quarter to quarter seems to be tough to achieve for BP at the moment with a missed forecast in Q1 following on from a very strong update last time out to round off 2023.

‘Lower energy prices and weaker fuels margin are to blame for the slump. Investors will be pleased to see this miss will not affect the buyback programme and the dividend is being held steady.

‘Looking ahead the company aims to deliver $2 billion worth of cost savings over the next 2 years, this seems like a punchy target but if achieved will help ride out volatility in the other variables affecting the top line number.

‘Despite the dip, shares are still up for the year and now represent an 8% discount to this year’s high seen last month.’

BP misses profit expectations – but investors comforted with share buyback

Stuart Lamont, investment manager at RBC Brewin Dolphin:

‘As with Shell last week, investors were looking for reassurance from BP on production volumes and capital discipline.

‘However, BP has missed profit expectations on the back of lower gas prices, weaker margins, and operational outages.

‘The extension to the share buyback programme and maintained dividend will, nevertheless, provide shareholders with some solace, both of which suggest BP’s management team sees this as a temporary setback and remains relatively optimistic about the near-term outlook.’

House prices to jump 2.5% as economy brightens and mortgage rates fall, says Savills

House prices will rise by 2.5 per cent this year amid an improved economic outlook and lower mortgage costs, property firm Savills has predicted.

It previously expected that prices would fall by 3 per cent.

Savills’ forecast is the latest to take a more upbeat view. Lloyds, Britain’s biggest mortgage lender, also recently said it saw prices rising this year. Lucian Cook, head of residential research at Savills, said the outlook had improved since its last forecast in November.

Wayve raises more than $1bn

British self-driving tech startup Wayve has raised $1.05billion in a funding round led by Japanese investment bank SoftBank Group.

The funding will be used to accelerate the development and launch in production-model vehicles of its Embodied AI technology that can learn from and adapt to human behavior.

Nvidia also contributed in the Series C funding round as a new investor, as did existing investor Microsoft .

The latest funding brings Wayve’s total funds raised to just over $1.3billion and marks the largest investment yet in a British startup focused on artificial-intelligence technology.

Founded in 2017, Wayve’s autonomous driving technology uses AI that the startup says will enable vehicles to ‘navigate situations that do not follow strict patterns or rules, such as unexpected actions by drivers, pedestrians, or environmental elements’.

‘This will enable automakers and fleets to accelerate their transition from assisted to autonomous driving,’ Wayve boss Alex Kendall told the Reuters news agency.

Retail sales sink in April on bad weather

Retail sales dropped 4 per cent in April versus the previous year, dampened by a spell of wet weather and an early Easter bank holiday.

The year-on-year drop is set against a growth of 5.1 per cent in April 2023, but was artificially worsened by the earlier timing of Easter, which previously pushed March sales unusually high, according to the British Retail Consortium (BRC)-KPMG Retail Sales Monitor.

Nonetheless, even when correcting for the seasonal distortion, the average growth for March and April together was only 0.2 per cent, down on the three-month average of 0.5 per cent and the 12-month average of 2.2 per cent.

Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the British Retail Consortium, said: ‘Dismal weather and disappointing sales led to a depressing start to spring for retailers, even accounting for the change in timing of Easter.’

Attacks in the Red Sea are escalating, warns shipping giant Maersk

Disruption in the Red Sea is getting worse and will reduce the capacity of trade from the Far East to Europe by up to a fifth this quarter, shipping giant Maersk warns.

Container vessels have been rerouted around the southern tip of Africa since the end of last year to avoid attacks by Iranian-backed Houthi militants in the Red Sea.

BP profits slump 72% as gas prices fall

BP posted a 72 per cent year-on-year decline in net profits for the first quarter as the energy giant suffered much lower gas prices.

Profit after tax tumbled to $2.3billion from $8.2billion in the first three months of 2023, as total revenue dropped 13 percent to $48.9billion.

Rival Shell last week said its net profit dropped 15 percent to $7.4billion in the first quarter.

Gas prices have dropped heavily since soaring after the invasion of Ukraine by major energy producer Russia in early 2022.

Chief executive Murray Auchincloss said: ‘We’ve delivered another resilient quarter financially and continued to make progress on our strategy. Oil production was up and our ACE platform in the Caspian is now producing.

‘We are simplifying and reducing complexity across bp and plan to deliver at least $2 billion of cash cost savings by the end of 2026 through high grading our portfolio, digital transformation, supply chain efficiencies and global capability hubs.’

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

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