LONDON - BP's
By 9:37 a.m., the FTSE 100 <.FTSE> was 7.49 points lower at 5,200.14 after closing down 50.83 points, or 1.0 percent, at 5,191.74.
Oil giant BP was the major driver of blue-chip gains, up 4.7 percent after it reported a halving of third-quarter profits but beat forecasts by a wide margin.
BG Group
"We can put this move higher down to BP," said Angus Campbell, head of sales at Capital Spreads. "It's benefiting other energy stocks, but miners and banks, which were the major drivers of the rally before are lower, so we'll have to see if the rally can be maintained."
The FTSE 100 <.FTSE> has gained 50 percent since touching a six-year trough in March and is has risen for each of the last four months, the longest such winning streak since 2006.
With the corporate earnings season already underway in the U.S., investors focus on third-quarter results from companies like British American Tobacco
Banks were the biggest drag on the index, with Royal Bank of Scotland the worst performer, down 5.6 percent.
Investors were unsettled after fears mounted on Monday that Lloyds Banking Group
Lloyds was down 4.6 percent while Barclays
Insurers were also pressured as sentiment in the financial sector soured. Prudential
Heavyweight miners were weak as metal prices fell as doubts about the demand outlook resurfaced.
Rio Tinto
Among gainers media issues saw interest. Publishing group Reed Elsevier
Investors will watch the CBI distributive trade report for October due at 11 a.m., while U.S. economic data set for release on Tuesday include the August figures for the S&P/Case-Shiller index of house prices at 1 p.m. and U.S. consumer confidence numbers for the same month at 2 p.m.
The Bank of England's quantitative easing policy will not cause a future surge in inflation, BoE policymaker Adam Posen said on Monday.
(Reporting by Simon Falush; editing by Karen Foster)