LONDON, Jan 3 — Britain’s stock market indexes surged in the first trading session of the new decade, as investors welcomed China’s monetary policy easing and US President Donald Trump set the date for sealing a Phase 1 trade deal with Beijing.

The FTSE 100 jumped after two straight sessions of losses to rise 0.8 per cent after China cut the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) for banks and Trump said a Phase 1 trade deal with Beijing would be signed on January 15.

Mining shares and oil majors were among the top gainers, with Antofagasta, Glencore and BP advancing between 2 per cent-3.1 per cent.

The FTSE 250 soared 1 per cent to notch up a fresh record high and the British indexes enjoyed their best day since mid-December, when Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s election win and de-escalating trade tensions had triggered a rally in equities.

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Gains were further supported by strong demand for cyclical stocks such as banks, that led blue-chips Lloyds and Barclays higher by 2 per cent and 3 per cent, respectively.

But despite yesterday’s rise, which came after two sessions of profit-taking following the FTSE 100’s best run in three years, analysts warned against getting carried away, citing thin trading volume and calling China’s policy predictable.

“The move on the RRR had been well telegraphed but came as a welcome New Year’s gift,” OANDA analyst Jeffrey Halley said.

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Cityindex analyst Ken Odeluga echoed that Beijing’s policy decision wasn’t surprising, adding that though a signing date for Phase 1 was set, uncertainties remained about if and when more comprehensive trade agreements would be nailed down.

“As much as investors are keen to ring-in the New Year with sure-footed gains, these influences are of course ‘so 2019’,” he said.

“Predicating a positive risk-asset rally on them continues to ignore a whole host of well-rehearsed reasons to remain cautious.”

Tullow Oil, which plummeted more than 70 per cent last month after it scrapped its dividend and its CEO stepped down, plunged as much as 20 per cent following underwhelming results of drilling at its Carapa-1 well offshore Guyana.

“The results from the Carapa-1... are, in our view, a negative,” Berenberg analysts wrote. They added that the four metres of net oil pay reported from the well was unlikely to be commercial. — Reuters