FTSE closes firmly lower as miners extend early losses



15 March 2010 @ 06:00 pm BST

END-OF-DAY REPORT: Headline shares added to losses in the afternoon session, as miners and oil producers were hit by falling commodity prices, with nothing in the way of corporate news to provide support.

At the close of business, the FTSE100 was down 31.8 points at 5,593.85 with the FTSE250 off 62.55 points at 9,879.01 and the FTSE Smallcaps 1.92 points better at 2,887.95.

NEW YORK

US stocks dropped in late morning trade, as a strengthening dollar hit commodity prices and technology stocks fell after reports Google may pull out of China.

Approaching the close in London, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 28 points at 10,597, the S&P500 lost 7 points at 1,143 and the Nasdaq Composite dipped 19 points at 2,349.

LONDON MARKETS

With little in the way of corporate news to provide momentum, trade in London was quiet. Continued concerns over fiscal tightening in China and a strengthening dollar hit commodity issues, with miners slumping to the foot of the FTSE league table.

ENRC was the session's biggest casualty, slumping 40p at 1,133p. Xstrata was down 36p at 1,157p, while Kazakhmys lost 44p at 1,473p, Antofagasta fell 32p at 1,001p and Lonmin dipped 33p at 1,965p. Randgold Resources slid 106p at 4,878p as gold settled at $1,104 an ounce.

Oil producers fell as a strong dollar pulled the price of crude below $80 a barrel, with Shell down 11p at 1,830p, BP 0.6p lower at 619.3p and BG Group losing 15.5p at 1,171.5p.

The cigarette makers were also out of favour, with BAT falling 17.5p at 2,216p and Imperial Tobacco down 19p at 2,059p.

British Airways edged down 0.2p at 235.4p as its strike woes continued. The carrier will announce later today which of its flights are likely to be hit when cabin crew begin their walk-out.

Only Royal Bank of Scotland made any progress among the banking fraternity, edging up 0.16p at 42.73p. Lloyds closed off 0.9p at 57.57p, Barclays was 3.25p lower at 348.6p and Standard Chartered lost 3p at 1,731.5p.

Building supplies giant Wolseley was one of the day's biggest blue chip losers, off 56p at 1,620p, as home builders slumped on news house price growth stalled in the last month.

Other notable first line casualties included insurer Prudential, down 15p at 537.5p, oil services group Petrofac, 28p lower at 1,212p, and broadcaster BSkyB, 14p lower at 585p.

On the upside with blue chips, distribution group Bunzl ticked up 3.5p at 721p on announcing the acquisition of Swiss retail distributor Weita.

BT Group was high on the leaderboard, ahead 1.4p at 124.7p, helped by an upgrade to buy from hold at Citigroup, with the target price raised to 150p from 145p.

Few retailers found favour on news from the British Retail Consortium that retail sales in central London in February were 9.9% higher on a like-for-like basis than a year ago. Additionally, the BDO High Street Sales Tracker for the week to 7th March 2010 showed high street sales up 9.2% on the equivalent week in 2009.

Marks & Spencer made the most of the news, ticking up 3.4p at 361.5p.

Utilities were also in vogue, with Centrica topping the FTSE leaderboard for the day, up 4.7p at 294.7p after Nomura raised its target on the stock to 370p from 340p. Severn Trent gained 5p at 1,200p and National Grid rose 3.5p at 654p.

Pharmaceutical firms were established amongst the winners, with GlaxoSmithKline 5p higher at 1,248p and Shire up 17p at 1,466p, although AstraZeneca slipped 4.5p at 2,917.5p.

Other notable gainers included global brewer SABMiller, up 19p at 1,893p, and aero-engine maker Rolls-Royce, 3.5p better at 568p. Story provided by Business Financial Newswire

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