LONDON, Aug 18 ― London's FTSE 100 rose yesterday, helped by gains in heavyweight energy and healthcare stocks, with sentiment bolstered by robust earnings from BHP Group and employment numbers that showed a steady economic recovery in the UK.
After falling as much as 0.5 per cent, the blue-chip FTSE 100 index ended 0.3 per cent higher, helped by oil majors BP and Royal Dutch Shell as crude prices recouped early losses.
Healthcare stocks rose 1.1 per cent with drugmakers including AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, and Hikma Pharmaceuticals rising between 1 per cent and 2.3 per cent.
Miner BHP Group gained 3.1 per cent to the top of the FTSE 100 after posting its best annual profit in nearly a decade. It also announced an exit from its US$13 billion petroleum business in a portfolio shake-up that will see it leave London's FTSE 100 index.
"BHP has a clear strategy now of focusing on future-proofed commodities which are part of the transition away from fossil fuels or in other words being part of the solution rather than part of the problem and it's an approach which is winning favour from the market,” said Russ Mould, investment director at AJ Bell.
Steadily rising commodity prices and cheap interest rates have helped the FTSE 100 rise nearly 11 per cent year-to-date, but inflation pressure, risks linked to the coronavirus pandemic and less weightage of tech stocks on the index have led it to underperform developed-market peers.
The number of employees on British company payrolls rose by 182,000 in July from June, moving closer to their pre-pandemic level as the economy recovers from its coronavirus lockdowns, tax data showed.
Unemployment in the UK dropped to 4.7 per cent in the three months to June, lower than economist expectations of 4.8 per cent.
The domestically focussed mid-cap index eased 0.2 per cent, with travel stocks declining the most.
Online trading platform Plus500 jumped 5.1 per cent to the top of the mid-cap index after it forecast annual revenue "significantly ahead” of analysts' estimates.
UK-listed shares of food-ordering firm Just Eat Takeaway.com gained 2.9 per cent and was the second-best performer on FTSE 100, after it reported a better-than-expected operating loss of €190 million (RM942 million) for the first half of 2021. ― Reuters
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