LONDON - Top shares were up 0.3 percent early on Monday, as gains in commodity stocks outweighed slight weakness in defensives like pharmaceutical and tobacco stocks.
By 9:12 a.m., the FTSE 100 <.FTSE> was up 16.66 points at 5,061.21 having fallen 1.8 percent on Friday, notching up its largest weekly fall, at 3.8 percent, since March.
Commodity stocks were the biggest positive among large-caps, supported as copper and crude prices rose slightly helped by data from major commodities consumer, China.
HSBC's China Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) rose to an 18-month high in October of 55.4 from 55.0 in September, pointing to sustained strength in the country's fast-growing manufacturing sector.
Rio Tinto
Gold miner Randgold Resources
Among the energy majors, BG Group
"Today the market is trying to shake off that fall on Friday, but it will be a difficult week to navigate as investors are awaiting a batch of corporate data and a decision from the Bank of England later in the week," said Richard Hunter, head of equities at Hargreaves Landsdown.
Investors focussed on the latest Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee meeting, decisions from which are due on Thursday, with no change to interest rates expected but an increase in the bank's quantitative easing policy anticipated.
RBS SLIDES
Royal Bank of Scotland
Lloyds Banking Group
Other banks were mixed. Barclays
Defensive stocks such as pharmaceuticals and tobacco, which tend to underperform as the market rises, were the biggest weight on the index.
AstraZeneca
There will be a raft of major companies reporting third-quarter results this week including iconic retailer Marks & Spencer
Data released overnight showed house prices fell at their slowest annual rate since June 2008 in October, dropping 4.2 percent, due to an ongoing lack of housing for sale after the credit crunch, property data company Hometrack said.
October's CIPS manufacturing PMI report is due out at 9:28 a.m., with a reading of 50.0 forecast, up from 49.5 in September.
Meanwhile, the U.S. ISM report for October, plus September pending homes sales and construction spending numbers should attract attention in the afternoon.
The benchmark index fell 1.7 percent overall in October, the first monthly drop since June but is still up about 46 percent since its March low.
(Reporting by Simon Falush; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)