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Monday 19 December 2022 4:34 pm  |  Updated:  Monday 19 December 2022 6:00 pm

FTSE 100’s winners and losers in 2022

Daily Life In England Under Third Coronavirus Lockdown
CityAM examines who's held up and dragged down the FTSE 100 in 2022 (Photo by Dan Kitwood/Getty Images)

The Christmas lull is setting in. Investors are bracing to turn off their screens and get away from the daily City grind. Trading volumes on the FTSE 100 are thinning.

It’s also that time of year when financial journalists pick through the UK’s worst (and best) performing stocks over the past 12 months.  

Without further ado (or pressure from our editors), we – with the ever-helpful hand of Hargreaves Lansdown’s senior investment and markets analyst Susannah Streeter – take a look at who’s been dragging and boosting the FTSE 100 in 2022.

WORST PERFORMERS

Ocado

The middle-class favourite and online supermarket has had a torrid, torrid year that looks set to see it seize the unwanted title of worst performer on London’s premier FTSE 100 index.

It’s shed nearly 60 per cent over the last (nearly) 12 months.

Ocado was one the pandemic’s darlings. Shoppers flocked to its online shopping platform to avoid heading to physical stores and risk catching the virus, seeing its share price take off. 

Now, buffeted by cost of living pressures and putting Covid-19 to the back of their minds, consumers have largely returned to normal spending habits.

“Ocado’s retail business has been sideswiped by a mini-reversal of the huge upswing in pandemic business and cost-of-living pressures with shoppers drifting off to cheaper competitors,” Streeter said.

DOWN 59 PER CENT

Ocado has been the worst performer on the FTSE 100 so far in 2022.
Source: TradingView

Persimmon

House builder Persimmon has been a big casualty of the Bank of England’s forceful campaign to get inflation lower.

The firm operates in a market that is highly sensitive to changes in interest rates, which the Bank has done nine times in a row, each upward and to taking them to the highest level since 2009.

House prices look set to fall sharply in 2023 driven by prospective buyers being priced out of the market by higher mortgage rates and a rapid upward march in home prices since the pandemic.

“The current dip in house prices could well be the start of a bigger correction, and just how much volumes might fall also remains to be seen. This will squeeze operating margins which has been one of Persimmon’s key attractions,” Streeter reckons.

The firm has been 2022’s second worst performer on the FTSE 100.

Read more

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DOWN 58 PER CENT

Source: TradingView

BEST PERFORMERS

Pearson

A revamp toward providing learning resources digitally has sent publisher Pearson on an upward spiral this year.

Delivering educational materials remotely makes it much easier for people to access and, as Streeter points out, those customers are more likely to “hang around for longer so investors are clearly enthused by Pearson’s efforts and are hoping they will translate into robust future growth”.

UP 54 PER CENT

Source: TradingView

BAE Systems

It must feel odd seeing BAE System’s share price skyrocket. The company is the FTSE 100’s best performer in 2022 so far, surging over 52 per cent.

It tends to perform well when conflicts break out. Looking at the share graph, its price spiked around the time Russia invaded Ukraine and has held steady ever since.

The firm mainly makes and delivers heavy duty military equipment, which is likely to be in high demand in the coming years due to the likes of Britain, US and Germany pledging to ramp up defence spending in response to Putin’s illegal aggression.

“Its share price surged following Russia’s aggression and the enlargement of NATO alongside pledges of multinational support for Ukraine has helped maintain the momentum,” Streeter pointed out.

UP 52 PER CENT

Source: TradingView

HONOURABLE MENTIONS

HSBC UP 9.9 PER CENT

SHELL UP 38 PER CENT

BP UP 34 PER CENT

BT DOWN 31 PER CENT

TESCO DOWN 21 PER CENT

Read more

Deloitte and KPMG challenge PwC’s iron grip on FTSE 100 clients

Big Four firms

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