* FTSE 100 down 0.2%, FTSE 250 dips 0.5%
* Global fears remain, U.S.-China talks near
* Mid-cap SIG plummets after profit warning
(Adds news items, analyst comments, updates share prices)
By Shashwat Awasthi
Oct 7 (Reuters) - London's FTSE 100 fell further on Monday,
with markets unable to dispel broader growth fears that had
dragged the index to its worst week in nearly a year, while SIG
slumped to a near three-year low after a profit warning and
dragged the mid-caps lower.
The main index, which shed more than 3.6% last week
on fears of a global economic slowdown in the face of a long
U.S.-China trade dispute and the risk of a recession, drifted in
and out of the red before settling 0.2% lower by 0800 GMT.
The FTSE 250 lagged the European benchmark index
and fell 0.5%, with building materials supplier SIG
tanking 23% after saying weaker construction activity in
the UK would hit annual profit in its core units.
SIG's warning hit shares of fellow suppliers. Kingfisher
, Travis Perkins and Howden Joinery shed
between 2.1%-3.7%.
Blue-chip financial stocks were down the most,
with Asia-focussed HSBC more than 1% lower. Separately,
the Financial Times reported that the bank was planning to cut
up to 10,000 jobs to reduce costs.
Most blue-chip exporter stocks were unable to capitalize on
a drop in the value of the pound, as weakness in the currency
was outweighed by broader uncertainty.
London-listed shares of Carnival fell 2.7% to the
bottom of the FTSE 100 after HSBC cut its rating and price
target on the cruise operator's stock.
Any hopes that the blue-chip index could muster a comeback
after last week's sell-off were dashed despite an upbeat U.S.
jobs report on Friday, with most market participants pinning
hopes of an upturn on this week's Sino-U.S. trade talks.
"Broadly speaking, the trade talks will drown out the data
prints this week on all but a very short-term basis," said
Jeffrey Halley, senior market analyst, Asia Pacific at Oanda.
"Soothing noises from either side that the talks have
progressed well should be enough to jumpstart markets around the
world, even if only temporarily."
Investors will also look intently at the latest minutes from
the U.S. Federal Reserve amid hopes that the central bank will
cut interest rates for the third time this year.
"An official no progress or breakdown (in trade talks) will
have a magnified adverse effect... the odds of a Fed cut at the
end of the month will become a 100% done-deal," Halley said.
(Reporting by Shashwat Awasthi in Bengaluru; Editing by Bernard
Orr)