Strong annual results give Ryanair stock a tailwind

DUBLIN REPORT: Iseq: 2982.44 (+34.74) Settlement Date: June 4th THERE WAS only one game in town yesterday

DUBLIN REPORT: Iseq: 2982.44 (+34.74) Settlement Date: June 4thTHERE WAS only one game in town yesterday. Ryanair wooed the market with an impressive set of annual results, drawing the attention of both domestic and international investors.

Analysts noted that the upbeat 2011 guidance from a company with a reputation for understating estimates and the surprise payment of a dividend were particularly welcomed by the market. The stock – which saw about 2½ times its usual volume – advanced 4.4 per cent to close at €3.53.

Rival airline Aer Lingus also experienced a bounce, adding two cent or 3 per cent to €0.70.

Otherwise it was a fairly quiet day on the market, with the Iseq taking its lead from the macro context. In line with the other main European exchanges, the Iseq dipped in the early part of the session but regained ground somewhat as positive manufacturing data from the US lifted markets in the afternoon.

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Irish banking shares finished lower, mirroring the European trend that saw banking stocks fall after a European Central Bank report stoked concern that higher funding and provisioning costs may reduce profit.

Irish Life Permanent continued its weak form of late, and was again the worst performer among the Irish financials, shedding 5 per cent to finish at €1.85.

There was huge volatility in Bank of Ireland stock, according to traders, with the ordinary stock trading as low as 66 cent and finishing the session pretty much flat at 71.5 cent, while the nil paid rights traded at lows of 10 but finished at 15 cent.

AIB did relatively well, losing a cent, or just under 1 per cent in value, to close at €1.02.

Having spent much of the early part of the session in the red, building materials group CRH followed the general trajectory of the international markets, regaining ground to finish up 3 per cent.

Suzanne Lynch

Suzanne Lynch

Suzanne Lynch, a former Irish Times journalist, was Washington correspondent and, before that, Europe correspondent