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Market Pulse
22 Jun
brexit reino unido
Credit Suisse would slash FTSE 100, Euro Stoxx 50 targets on Brexit

In its latest global equity strategy note, Credit Suisse said it would cut its FTSE 100 year-end target by 6% and its Euro Stoxx 50 target by 12% in the event of a Brexit.

22 Jun
debenhams, oxford street
Debenhams sales and margins shrink and in third quarter

Department store group Debenhams revealed like-for-like sales shrank in recent weeks and, while it warned that gross profit margins may be flatter than previously thought, full year profit is still on track to hit its target range.

22 Jun
union-europea-banderas
Europe open: Stocks edge higher as EU referendum looms

European equity markets edged tentatively higher in what appeared to be relatively calm trading a day ahead of Britain’s referendum on EU membership.

22 Jun
trading, stock, stocks, trader, market
Icap and Tullett Prebon propose remedies to regulator's concerns

ICAP has proposed selling its London-based oil broking business and issuing its shares in the enlarged Tullett Prebon to remedy concerns raised by the UK competition regulator.

22 Jun
hornby models toys hobbies train steam
Hornby FY loss widens; placing and turnaround plan announced

AIM-listed train set maker Hornby posted a wider full-year loss and announced an £8m placing as it outlined plans to turnaround the business after a string of profit warnings.

22 Jun
elementic chemical works urlay nook
Elementis warns on first-half Chromium earnings

Specialty chemicals company Elementis issued a profit warning ahead of its interim results on Wednesday, with sales in the Chromium division failing to fire.

22 Jun
Westminster, London, politics, government, Big Ben
London pre-open: Stocks seen higher as focus remains on EU referendum

London stocks were seen opening in the black on Wednesday as investors continued to keep a close eye on EU referendum developments a day ahead of the vote.

22 Jun
Wednesday newspaper round-up: Brexit, Amazon, BHS, MyLocal

Whitehall is preparing for the biggest bureaucratic upheaval for a generation in the event of a Leave vote, as the engine of British government is reconfigured and centralised to cope with an EU exit. While informal planning is kept to a tight circle, officials at the top of the civil service are looking at options to create either a Brexit super-ministry or a dedicated trade department to manage an EU divorce and its consequences, according to aides familiar with the discussions.