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* FTSE 100 up 1.8%, FTSE 250 adds 1.9%
* Melrose tops FTSE 100 on cost-cutting plan
* Aston Martin slips on furloughing some employees
March 31 (Reuters) - UK shares moved higher on Tuesday as
stable oil prices and positive factory data out of China were
encouraging even though the blue-chip FTSE 100 was set for its
worst quarter since 1987.
The index rose 1.8% by 0816 GMT, with turnaround
specialist Melrose Industries surging 14.4% after
saying it was reducing its expenses, with senior staff across
many of its businesses taking a temporary 20% pay cut in an
effort to ride out the health crisis.
The domestically focused midcap index rose 1.9%, but
was on course to log its worst quarterly loss ever.
Oil prices steadied after hitting 18-year lows as U.S.
President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin
agreed to talks to stabilise energy markets, helping oil
companies Royal Dutch Shell and BP gain more
than 2%.
While there were concerns about a sustained recovery,
factory activity in China unexpectedly expanded in March from a
collapse the month before.
Luxury carmaker Aston Martin fell 8.9% after saying
it is furloughing some employees as it handles the fallout from
the coronavirus outbreak, which has closed its car factories.
(Reporting by Devik Jain in Bengaluru; Editing by Bernard Orr)