FTSE 100 trades in tight range after hitting record high

The FTSE 100 traded within a tight range on Monday as investors digested positive developments from the China/US trade talks.

London’s leading index was marginally higher on Monday, trading in a tight range between 9,660 and 9,635—the top end of this range was a fresh intraday record high. A close above 9,645 would be a fresh all-time closing high.

“Optimism about the potential for a US-China trade agreement was helping to create a cautiously positive mood in markets at the start of the week,” says AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould.

“In the UK market, the mining sector moved higher, bar the precious metal contingent who were hit by lower gold prices, although negative news for index heavyweight HSBC acted as a drag on the FTSE 100.

“A milder than expected reading of US inflation at the end of last week also proved supportive to sentiment. Although investor confidence may be tested during a busy week for corporate news across the Atlantic, including earnings from the likes of Microsoft, Apple, Amazon and Meta.”

US futures showed more signs of life than the FTSE 100, and the S&P 500 looked set to open higher by more than 0.5% at a new record high.

HSBC was the standout detractor in London. Although the stock was only down 1%, its large index weighting meant news of a $1bn provision relating to the Bernard Madoff scandal offset gains elsewhere.

“As Halloween approaches, an episode out of what feels like the dim and distant past has returned to haunt HSBC and hardly set the scene for the bank’s third-quarter update tomorrow in a way it would have wanted,” Russ Mould said.

“A ruling from Luxembourg’s highest court on a lawsuit, brought by investors who lost money in Bernard Madoff’s multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme, will see HSBC set aside a material sum.”

HSBC was joined by precious metals miners Fresnillo and Endeavour towards the bottom of the leaderboard as gold prices fell again.

Thankfully, the risk-on sentiment was felt in diversified miners, banks and the Polar Capital Technology Trust, which is proving to be a great way for UK investors to gain exposure to leading US technology companies and the AI trade.

Glencore was the FTSE 100’s top riser with gains of 2%.

Springfield Properties – heading North, AGM Update due, shares 111p, TP 159p

‘Build Baby Build?’
Ministers have been warned that sales of new-build homes have sunk to lows not seen since the global financial crisis more than a decade and a half ago, despite that it could well be worth taking a look at this ‘recovery’ prospect.
This coming Wednesday, 29th October, will see Springfield Properties (LON:SPR) announcing an AGM Trading Update which could outline further details of the prospects for its focus on the North.
The £132m-capitalised group, which is a leading housebuilder in Scotland focused on delivering private and affordable housing, is now pushing ahead wi...

UK budget: The five biggest tax fears and how to protect yourself by HL

A study by Opinium for Hargreaves Lansdown has identified the top five biggest fears ahead of November’s budget, with income tax and VAT at the top of the list.

The UK government is refusing to rule out tax increases in the upcoming budget and has manufactured widespread fear among businesses and consumers, which is being felt in the economy, particularly in the housing and jobs markets.

“Your biggest tax fear is about to come true,” said Sarah Coles, head of personal finance, Hargreaves Lansdown.

“Statistically, the tax you’re most likely to be worried about rising in the Budget is income tax, and thanks to frozen thresholds, this is nailed on. Unfortunately, the second biggest worry is VAT, and thanks to inflation, there’s every chance you’ll automatically be handing over more money to the taxman in VAT too. Other concerns also remain on the table, and worries around pensions have risen up the ranks for higher earners. So, it’s worth understanding what you can do about it.”

Here are the top five biggest fears around the upcoming budget and what you can do to protect yourself, by Hargreaves Lansdown:

  1. Income tax

Income tax is rightly a concern, because the government is expected to leave allowances and thresholds untouched. It means every inflation-linked pay rise will push more people into paying more tax, and more into paying higher rates. Fears go further than this though, because the most common worry is that income tax itself will rise. This was ruled out in the election manifesto, so it’s an indication of how concerned people are about the shortfall in the nation’s finances, and how worried they are that there might need to be a big solution to a serious problem.

What you can do to protect yourself

The best way to protect savings from income tax is to hold them in a cash ISA, and your allowance is £20,000 in the current tax year. If you have the money available now, it may make sense to open an ISA sooner rather than later, so you know where you stand. 

You can also pay into a pension or a SIPP. The annual pension allowance is £60,000, and the fact you get tax relief at your highest marginal rate means higher earners in particular should look to take as much advantage as makes sense for their finances. 

Meanwhile, if you’re married or in a civil partnership and your partner pays a lower rate of tax, you can transfer income-producing assets into their name, and both take advantage of your tax allowances. You can also use all the tax-efficient vehicles at your disposal, including your ISAs and pensions, as well as the Junior ISAs and Junior SIPPs of any qualifying children.

  1. VAT

Almost one in ten are worried about a potential rise in VAT. On the one hand, they’re right to be worried, because VAT is a percentage of spending, so inflation will automatically mean handing more cash over in VAT. However, the good news is that the VAT rate itself is highly unlikely to change after being ruled out during the election campaign. It wouldn’t stop the government making tweaks, but as we saw with the fiasco of the pasty tax in 2012, this can be tricky.

  1. Council tax

Around one in ten people are most worried about council tax. There have been suggestions from think tanks that there could be an extra charge on pricier homes, a national surcharge, or even wholesale reform. However, this remains very firmly in the realms of speculation. Sadly, it doesn’t mean council tax will remain the same, because it rises every year, and given how councils are wrestling with their finances, we may well see another 5% rise.

  1. Inheritance tax

Some 7% of people are worried about losing inheritance tax allowances or exemptions that save millions of estates from tax. It includes things like the nil rate bands that mean the first £325,000 of your estate, and £175,000 of property, can be left tax free (if the home is being left to a child or grandchild). It also includes the rule that anything left to a spouse or civil partner is tax free, and that if you leave everything to them, you also leave them your nil rate bands, so they can leave £1 million free of tax. These allowances and exemptions are so important to people that changes would be incredibly unpopular. However, these rules aren’t written in stone, so can’t be completely ruled out.

What you can do to protect yourself

If you’re worried about a potential inheritance tax change, you can give up to £3,000 away before the Budget, which will fall within your annual gift allowance. You can give away larger sums, and they will be outside of your estate after seven years. There’s a separate rule that means you can give away surplus income inheritance tax free too. If you were always planning on giving some money away, and you can afford to live without it, it may make sense to do it sooner rather than later.

  1. Extension of the freeze in income tax thresholds

This has been a common rumour, given that it has been such an effective stealth tax already and is seen as an opportunity to boost the tax take without falling foul of promises not to increase the rate of income tax.

Higher rate taxpayer worries

Capital gains tax

There have been questions over whether the rate could rise again, and there’s always the risk of a change to the rule that means CGT resets on death. Given that higher rate taxpayers are more likely to invest, it’s unsurprising that capital gains tax rises are more of a concern for this group of people.

It would add insult to injury for investors, who have already had to deal with the dramatic cuts to the tax-free allowance, and a hike to the rate on stocks and shares. This isn’t just a tax for the mega wealthy. The lower allowance now means someone on an average income who has invested carefully throughout their life can easily face a tax bill when they rebalance their portfolio or sell up to cover their costs later in life. In fact, cutting the allowance has hit smaller investors harder, because it used to cover a much larger proportion of their gains.

What you can do to protect yourself

To protect against CGT can use your annual allowance of £3,000 to realise gains gradually over the years. At the same time, you can use the Share Exchange (Bed & ISA) process to move the assets into a stocks and shares ISA, so you don’t have to worry about either dividend tax or CGT on these investments at any point. 

You can also offset any losses against your gains and give assets to a spouse or civil partner so they can use their annual allowance too. You can also hold assets for life, and the tax will reset to zero on death. It just remains to be seen whether this will remain the case after the Budget.”

Goodwin shares surge on profit upgrade surprise and special dividend

Goodwin shares jumped on Monday after the engineering company upgraded its profit outlook and announced a special dividend to be paid in November.

After releasing a trading update just a month ago, Goodwin made a surprise announcement on Monday that it expects pre-tax trading profit to exceed £71 million for the financial year ending April 2026.

This represents a 100% increase on the prior year’s £35.5 million.

The Stoke-on-Trent-based engineering firm said all divisions contributed to the performance, supported by a robust order book of £365 million. The firm said it had “a high degree of confidence” in the forecast and wouldn’t make a habit of issuing guidance, but, given the strength of recent trading, felt it appropriate to make the announcement.

In recognition of shareholders’ commitment to the company’s investment programmes, the board has declared a special one-off interim dividend of 532 pence per share. This comes in addition to the 140 pence dividend paid earlier this month and a further 140 pence due in April 2026.

The special dividend will be paid on 21st November to shareholders on the register at the close of business on 7th November.

The board emphasised that the special dividend would not compromise future growth and that it remains confident in ongoing profitability and cash flow to support existing operations and attractive investment opportunities.

Goodwin shares were 20% higher at the time of writing.

Vietnam to enjoy up to $25bn inflows after emerging market upgrade

Following Vietnam’s upgrade to emerging market status by FTSE Russell in early October, analysts estimate the new status could attract US$4–10bn in portfolio inflows over the next 12–18 months.

Other estimates predict Vietnam could see cumulative capital inflows of up to US$25bn by 2030.

This represents a wave of capital that will support the continued growth of Vietnamese equity markets and broader economic expansion.

In their monthly investor report, the team at Vietnam Holding, a Vietnam-focused investment trust, explained that the decision to upgrade Vietnam to an emerging market followed years of steady reform, including removing pre-funding requirements for foreign investors and launching the KRX trading system. These reforms are symptomatic of a Vietnamese government keen to open its economy to the world, ultimately leading to Vietnam achieving emerging market status.

In addition to the upgrade, Vietnam is enjoying strong economic growth in 2025, underscoring the attractiveness of its investment case.

Vietnam’s economy grew 6.93% in Q1 2025, 7.96% in Q2, and an estimated 8.23% in Q3—the fastest pace in over a decade. The country remains on track to meet its 8% GDP growth target for 2025.

Vietnam’s growth story is being driven by foreign investment and the resilience of the export market, despite concerns about global trade tariffs.

FDI disbursements rose 8.5% year-on-year to US$18.8bn in the first nine months of 2025. Exports have remained robust, led by electronics and agricultural goods.

The government’s US$36bn public-investment programme continues to anchor infrastructure growth, whilst construction and industrial sectors benefit from fiscal support and policy continuity.

Market Dynamics and Outlook

Vietnam’s stock market is now the most liquid in Southeast Asia, with domestic liquidity at record highs. Although retail flows can drive volatility, the broader trajectory is clear: reform momentum, foreign interest and strong domestic participation.

For long-term investors, the fundamentals are compelling. As Vietnam Holding say, “Vietnam has moved from frontier promise to emerging market reality”.

AIM weekly movers: Eco Buildings gains large Chile deal

1

Modular housing company Eco Buildings Group (LON: ECOB) is the best performer for the second week running. It has secured a contract worth €420m over seven years to supply 20,000 homes in Chile. The first 1,214 homes have been funded with a 50% deposit of £12.75m. It has taken more than two years to go through the approval process in Chile and win the order. The share price rose a further 84.2% to 22.1p.

Healthy food and snacks producer Tooru (LON: TOO) says gluten free food maker Juvela has launched retail brand OAF and it has eight products in Tesco. There are talks with other supermarkets. Management believes that existing funding facility will finance the growth. The share price is 56.8% to 0.29p. The issue price of the shares at the time of the reversal into the Riverfort Global Opportunities AIM shell was 0.75p.

Metals One (LON: MET1) and Thor Energy (LON: THR) have signed a binding agreement with DISA Technologies to treat uranium waste dumps in Colorado held by their joint venture. This includes a gross revenue sharing agreement for the uranium and other critical minerals produced. DISA has received its US Nuclear Regulatory Commission Service Providers License. Metals One owns 75% of the subsidiary holding rights to the uranium and minerals in the dumps with Thor Energy owning the other 25%. The subsidiary will receive between 2.5% to 4% of gross sale revenues. Metals One also says that first production at the Chilalo graphite project in Tanzania, where it has a minority stake, is being accelerated to October 2027. Metals One shares are up 37.3% to 4.05p. Thor Energy gained 14.8% to 0.775p.

Restaurants operator Various Eateries (LON: VARE) expects full year revenues to be £52.4m, which was ahead of expectations. Pre-tax loss will be reduced from £3.6m to £2.9m after the absorption of higher labour costs. Like-for-like sales were 4% higher in the fourth quarter. Zeus has reduced its forecast 2025-26 loss from £4m to £2.5m on revenues of £56.6m. The cash in the bank is being spent on new openings. The share price increased 35% to 13.5p.

FALLERS

Lung imaging technology developer Polarean Imaging (LON: POLX) is undertaking a strategic review of the business. This includes whether to stay on AIM, where liquidity has been poor. The cost base is also being assessed. Leaving AIM could help to reduce costs and could make it easier to generate additional funding. The share price dived 55% to 0.18p.

Arc Minerals (LON: ARCM) has ended its joint venture with Anglo American, which is merging with Teck, in Zambia. This covered the Domes region, which is an area where there have been recent copper discoveries. No drilling has taken place this year despite plans for significant spending on exploration. Arc Minerals is also involved in legal disputes in Zambia. There could be other large miners interested in the Domes licences if those disputes are sorted out. The share price slumped 52.4% to 0.5p.

Three directors are stepping down at syngas technology developer Eqtec (LON: EQT) and James Parsons has been appointed chief executive. Operations have been streamlined and annualised savings will be €1.5m. Rebel Ion is progressing with the acquisition of the company’s secured debt. However, it has suspended subscriptions for shares worth up to £1.5m under an agreement in June with £250,000 already subscribed. Eqtec’s broker Global Investment Strategy UK is providing a £1.5m convertible loan facility with an immediate draw down of £300,000. The share price fell 37.8% to 0.28p.

Bars operator The Revel Collective (LON: TRC) is conducting a strategic review, which includes a formal sales process. Cost savings have not offset the £4mm of additional annual costs from National Insurance and duty rises. First quarter like-for-like revenues were 7.4% lower. Net debt was £25.3m at the end of September 2025. Additional funding will be required to stay within banking limits. The share price dipped 36.4% to 0.175p, which is still above the low earlier in the year.

Aquis weekly movers: WeShop could provide value boost for WeCap

SulNOx Group (LON: SNOX) has gained a European patent for Sulnox Reclaim, which can be used to deal with oily wastewater from ships. This is the third fuel reclamation patent in Europe. Shipping company Eastern Pacific Shipping has been issued 3.27 million shares. This relates to volumes of Sulnox Eco purchased. The share price increased 21.8% to 33.5p.

The Smarter Web Company (LON: SWC) has bought 10 Bitcoin for £832,584. It owns 2,660 Bitcoin, having invested £220.4m. A further £1.19m has been raised by the company at 89p/share. The share price recovered 8.11% to 60p.

EDX Medical (LON: EDX) is raising £2m at 14p/share and up to £2m from a convertible loan note to founder Sir Chris Evans. He owns 35.2% of the share capital. The cash will accelerate development of digital diagnostic products. The share price improved 6.98% to 11.5p.

WeCap (LON: WCAP) investee company WeShop has filed a registration statement with the SEC to register 12.5 million WePoints which are part of the ShareBack Rewards Plan for customer of the shoppable social network. This is part of the process towards the Nasdaq listing, which could happen by 10 November. WeCap owns 12% of WeShop shares, which could be worth 8.4p/WeCap share at a valuation of £300m. The share price rose 6.12% to 2.6p.

Trading in Majestic Corporation (LON: MCJ) shares has started on the US OTCQB Venture Market. The share price edged up 6.56% to 162.5p.

Shares in Vaultz Capital (LON: V3TC) have also started trading on the US OTCQB Venture Market. The share price moved ahead 3.13% to 4.125p.

FALLERS

Vault Ventures (LON: VULT) has completed the third cycle of the vSignal.ai platform. Closed user testing starts on 29 October. The share price declined 16.7% to 0.75p.

Three new directors have been appointed by Eight Capital Partners (LON: ECP), including Federico Bazzoni as executive chairman. Two existing directors have stepped down. The share price fell 10.5% to 85p.

Mendell Helium (LON: MDH), which has an option over M3 Helium, says helium flow rates at Rost is increasing each day as dewatering progresses. It is currently generating $800 of helium each day. Production is expected to start by the end of October. Opportunities ae being assessed at the Jasper well in Nebraska. The share price slid 7.69% to 3p.

B HODL (LON: HODL) has taken its Bitcoin holding to 148 at a total cost of £12.5m. The company has applied for shares to be traded on the US OTCQB Venture Market. The share price dipped 1.79% to 13.75p.

JPMorgan Global Emerging Markets Income Trust Investor Presentation October 2025

JPMorgan Global Emerging Markets Income Trust (JEMI) aims to provide a diversified income-oriented way to tap into the growth potential of global emerging markets. The trust primarily seeks a dividend yield which is higher than the average emerging market company and is free to invest in any particular market, sector or country in the global emerging markets universe with no fixed limits on portfolio construction. The Company has the ability to use borrowing to gear the portfolio to up to 20% of net assets where appropriate.

Download the presentation slides.

Dunedin Income Growth Investment Trust Investor Presentation October 2025

Dunedin Income Growth Investment Trust targets growth of income and capital from a portfolio invested mainly in UK companies that meet the Company’s Sustainable and Responsible investing criteria. The Board believes that companies that best manage Environmental Social and Governance (ESG) risks and opportunities will provide investors with superior risk adjusted returns.

Download the presentation slides.

AIM movers: Inspecs bid approach and The Revel Collective sales process

4

Two unsolicited bid proposals have been made to spectacles supplier Inspecs (LON: SPEC). There has also ben a proposal from Safilo Group to acquire the Eschenbach Group and BoDe businesses of Inspecs. H2 Equity Partners, and Risk Capital Partners and Ian Livingstone, have set out non-binding cash offers with alternatives including unquoted securities. Inspecs joined AIM in February 2020 and raised £23.5m at 195p/share. The share price rebounded 15.6% to 55.5p.

Strategic Minerals (LON: SML) generated third quarter revenues of $1.08m from the Cobre magnetite project in the US. This covers corporate overheads and provides funding for the Redmoor tungsten project in the UK. The share price is 10.5% higher at 0.95p.

Shareholders in cyber security services provider Smarttech247 Group (LON: S247) overwhelmingly backed the resolution to leave AIM on 4 November. Even so, the share price recovered 8.7% to 3.75p.

South American miner Nativo Resources (LON: NTVO) has issued 4.09 million shares at 0.44p/share to pay creditors and two directors are taking £45,363 of fees in shares at 0.475p each. The share price rose 5.75% to 0.46p.

FALLERS

Bars operator The Revel Collective (LON: TRC) is conducting a strategic review, which includes a formal sales process. Cost savings have not offset the £4mm of additional annual costs from National Insurance and duty rises. First quarter like-for-like revenues were 7.4% lower. Net debt was £25.3m at the end of September 2025. Additional funding will be required to stay within banking limits. The share price dived 36.4% to 0.175p.

Three directors are stepping down at syngas technology developer Eqtec (LON: EQT) and James Parsons has been appointed chief executive. Operations have been streamlined and annualised savings will be €1.5m. Rebel Ion is progressing with the acquisition of the company’s secured debt. However, it has suspended subscriptions for shares worth up to £1.5m under an agreement in June with £250,000 already subscribed. Eqtec’s broker Global Investment Strategy UK is providing a £1.5m convertible loan facility with an immediate draw down of £300,000. The share price dipped 18.4% to 0.4p.

Building products supplier Alumasc (LON: ALU) has been hit by pre-Budget uncertainties, although it continues to outperform the construction sector. There have been project delays. Results were always going to be second half weighted. Cavendish has trimmed its 2025-26 pre-tax profit forecast from £15.3m to £14.4m with the dividend forecast unchanged at 11.3p/share. The share price declined 11% to 303p. The prospective multiple is just over ten.

Vet practices operator CVS Group (LON: CVSG) plans to move to the Main Market in early 2026 after 18 years on AIM. This means it will be eligible for inclusion in the FTSE 250 index. A share buyback programme of up to £20m has also been announced. This follows the recent publication of the Competition and Markets Authority of its provisional decision concerning the veterinary market. There are 21 measures recommended including better information on prices. The final decision will be in March 2026. The share price slipped 4.21% to 1364p.