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Airline stocks fall on UK’s fresh crackdown on travellers

EasyJet

Easyjet dropped 4.5 per cent, British Airways-owner IAG declined 3.3 per cent, Ryanair fell 3 per cent, Jet2 was down 3.7 per cent and Tui shed 4 per cent

Tough crackdowns on travellers entering the UK squeezed airline stocks. In a bid to halt the spread of new and possibly more dangerous Covid variants, UK residents returning from 33 ‘red list’ countries will have to stump up £1,750 to quarantine in a Government-sanctioned hotel for ten days.

In a further move, people travelling back to the UK will also have to pay for three coronavirus tests, potentially costing another £360.

Needless to say, the rules will almost certainly put paid to non-essential travel for at least the next few weeks.

Airline and other travel businesses had been desperately hoping that the rollout of vaccines might prompt a trickle of holidaymakers to go abroad this spring, building up to a better summer.

But it was a bruising day for the likes of Easyjet (down 4.5 per cent), British Airways-owner IAG (down 3.3 per cent), Ryanair (down 3 per cent), Jet2 (down 3.7 per cent) and Tui (which fell 4 per cent).

In addition to the expensive quarantine requirements, the stakes have also been raised by plans to fine anyone found not to be complying with the ten-day quarantine up to £10,000 – or even face a decade in prison.

Beleaguered cruise operator Carnival, plunged by 3.8 per cent, or 51.5p, to 1317.5p.

The Government has not yet said which hotels will be used for the quarantines. But Premier Inn-owner Whitbread closed almost flat – down 0.03 per cent, or 1p, to 3200p – while Holiday Inn-owner Intercontinental Hotels Group slid 0.9 per cent, or 45p, to 4981p.

The wider market managed to shrug off the travel share losses, with the FTSE 100 eking out a 0.1 per cent gain, up 8.03 points, to 6531.56.

The FTSE 250 also climbed, by 0.1 per cent, adding 26.39 points to close at 21112.94.

A jump in housebuilder shares helped keep the indexes in the black after Bellway said that it had built a record number of homes and posted first-half turnover of £1.7billion.

Mid-cap Bellway rose 3 per cent, or 90p, to 3120p, while on the Footsie Taylor Wimpey advanced 2.6 per cent, or 4.15p, to 165.9p and Berkeley by 2 per cent, or 86p, to 4392p.

The FTSE 250’s top riser, however, was software reseller Micro Focus. Shares shot 6.6 per cent higher, up 32.3p, to 524p despite tumbling to a £2.15billion loss from a £1.1billion profit the year before.

Micro Focus specialises in wringing profit out of old computer systems it acquires by selling software and maintenance services to banks and retailers which use them.

After a difficult few months, investors piled in after it reinstated a final dividend – of 15.5p per share – as it made ‘solid progress’ in its three-year turnaround plan.

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed by our writers are their own and do not represent the views of Precise Investors. The information provided on Precise Investors is intended for informational purposes only. Precise Investors is not liable for any financial losses incurred. Conduct your own research by contacting financial experts before making any investment decisions.

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