The latest Investing Matters Podcast with Jean Roche, Co-Manager of Schroder UK Mid Cap Investment Trust has just been released. Listen here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE
Stephen Yiu, FM at WS Blue Whale, discusses Nvidia, Visa/Mastercard, Lam Research & Allied Materials
Stephen Yiu, FM at WS Blue Whale, discusses Nvidia, Visa/Mastercard, Lam Research & Allied MaterialsView Video
Ben Turney, CEO at Kavango Resources, explains the company's progress from exploration to mining
Ben Turney, CEO at Kavango Resources, explains the company's progress from exploration to miningView Video

Latest Share Chat

London stocks log weekly declines on geopolitical, rate uncertainty

Fri, 05th Apr 2024 17:31

FTSE 100 down 0.8%, FTSE 250 off 0.7%

*

UK house prices fall for first time in 6 months

April 5 (Reuters) - The UK's main stock indexes recorded weekly losses on Friday against a backdrop of escalating Middle East tensions and a more cautious mood among investors following hawkish remarks from Federal Reserve officials.

The exporter-heavy FTSE 100 shed 0.8%, while the domestically focused FTSE 250 lost 0.7%. However, both the indexes picked up from their session lows after a stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report raised hopes of a soft landing in the United States.

Markets globally were unsettled by news that Israel braced for the possibility of a retaliatory attack after its suspected killing of Iranian generals in Damascus this week, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said the country would harm "whoever harms us or plans to harm us".

"Investors are having to seriously consider the potential that what's going on in the Middle East will get worse before it gets better and comments from the Israeli Prime Minister have stoked fears that there is going to be a much wider impact," Danni Hewson​​​​, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, said.

Oil prices extended gains on Friday and were headed for a second weekly gain. That in turn lifted the FTSE 350 energy sector but weighed on the travel sector .

Wall Street sold off sharply on Thursday after Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said that if inflation continues to stall, no rate cuts may be required at all by year end.

Most developed world equity markets have posted strong gains since late last year on hopes that major central banks will start easing monetary policy.

Investors currently expect the Bank of England to start cutting rates in June or August.

British house prices fell 1% in March, their first drop since September 2023, figures from mortgage lender Halifax showed.

Among individual stocks, Rio Tinto slipped 2.4% after shareholders demanded the company come clean on environmental issues.

Ocado Group slid almost 9%, extending losses for a second session, after the online supermarket announced Chairman Rick Haythornthwaite would step down. (Reporting by Pranav Kashyap, Khushi Singh and Sruthi Shankar in Bengaluru; Editing by Savio D'Souza, Shounak Dasgupta and Jane Merriman)

Related Shares

More News
20 May 2024 08:49

Citi downgrades Rio Tinto on rising China concerns

(Sharecast News) - Citi has cut its rating for Rio Tinto from 'buy' to 'neutral', saying that macro headwinds are rising for the mining group followin...

17 May 2024 16:55

LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 slips in tepid trade at end of week

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London closed lower on Friday in quiet trade, though gold and base metal miners surged on stronger commodity prices....

17 May 2024 15:52

London close: Stocks recoup some earlier losses

(Sharecast News) - London stocks remained in negative territory by Friday's close, although they managed to recoup some of the losses seen earlier in ...

17 May 2024 13:00

Sustainable Switch-Summer 2023 was the hottest in 2,000 years

May 17 - Sharon Kimathi Energy and ESG Editor, Reuters Digital

17 May 2024 09:06

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: Jefferies says buy Tritax Big Box post merger

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Friday morning and on Thursday:

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.