Friday, June 7, 2013

Why Associated British Foods and Bango Beat the FTSE 100 Today

LONDON -- The FTSE 100 (FTSEINDICES: ^FTSE  ) is still looking pretty glum, having dropped a further 2% to close at 6,525 points today despite a general uptick for the mining sector. With companies like Tesco and ARM Holdings falling, the overall trend was down.

But even on a day like today, we still saw some rises across the various indexes. Here are two that are looking positive.

Associated British Foods (LSE: ABF  )
Associated British Foods shares gained 1.4% to reach 1,837 pence after the firm's wholly owned British Sugar subsidiary announced that it is to redeem some of its debt financing. The firm will repay its entire £150 million, 10.75% redeemable debenture stock 2013 on July 2, with all interest accrued to that date.

The boost has helped the Associated British Foods share price to reverse from recent minor falls -- but it's still up more than 60% over the past 12 months.

Bango (LSE: BGO  )
Looking to a much smaller company now, the wonderfully named Bango saw its shares pick up 3.8% to 204 pence. Today's boost came when the mobile web-payments and analytics company announced that it has signed an agreement with Mozilla to offer Bango as an option for content paid for via the Firefox Marketplace app store -- it should be launched this year.

The terms of the deal have not been disclosed, but it's a big win for Bango's technology and services.

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