Smurfit Kappa dominates Iseq

Smurfit Kappa dominated today’s session on the Iseq, after shareholders Cinven and CVC together placed 25 million shares at €…

Smurfit Kappa dominated today’s session on the Iseq, after shareholders Cinven and CVC together placed 25 million shares at €8.50. The deal represented 11 per cent of Smurfit Kappa, which ended the session 4.65 per cent stronger at €9.00.

The market as a whole slipped back a touch, in line with European bourses, closing 0.16 per cent weaker.

Financial stocks performed fairly poorly on the day, with Bank of Ireland down 2.49 per cent, or 0.9 cent, to 35.3 cent and AIB, on the junior market, shedding 1.82 per cent, or 0.5 cent, to finish at 27 cent. Irish Life & Permanent slid by 1.9 cent to 93 cent, with investors now looking to results due at the start of next month.

Results came today for CRH peer Heidelberg, with poor weather eating into numbers. Shares in CRH nonetheless closed 11.5 cent higher at €16.485, with the outlook for US highway spend likely to be the short-term driver for the stock.

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Results are due on March 1st.

Elsewhere, Greencore dropped by 3.6 cent to €1.15 after its rival for Northern Foods, Boparan, issued an offer document yesterday.

Fellow food stock Kerry, which will report later this month, was in better shape as it rose by 55 cent to €25.25.

Elsewhere, the Iseq’s two aviation stocks slipped, with Aer Lingus declining by 2.5 cent to €1.02, and Ryanair falling by 3.6 cent to €3.609. Aer Lingus is also among stocks due to issue numbers at the end of the month.

Paddy Power fell back by 32 cent to €29.70, despite winning approval from the Australian Foreign Investment Review Board for its purchase of the portion of Sportsbet that it doesn’t already own. The only remaining condition for the deal is approval from Paddy Power’s own shareholders.

Also on the losing side at the close were Kingspan, FBD and Independent News & Media. Other rising stocks included Readymix, Origin and CPL.

Úna McCaffrey

Úna McCaffrey

Úna McCaffrey is Digital Features Editor at The Irish Times.