BT and Shell shares are in the spotlight at the start of the FTSE 100 results season. The oil giant boosted shareholder returns despite weaker earnings, while BT shares came under pressure amid disappointing revenue trends.
WH Smith has reported “strong momentum” in its travel business after sales in the division rose 6% on a like-for-like basis in the 21 weeks to 25 January. This figure included a 7% rise in the UK travel estate and 3% in North America.
FTSE 100 smashes through 8,600 mark for the first time - London’s top index finished 89.07 points, or 1.04%, higher to end the day at 8,646.88.
The UK's main stock indexes closed higher on Wednesday boosted by gains in the technology and financial sectors, while the pound slipped after Finance Minister Rachel Reeves's dovish remarks on resetting ties with the European Union and the United States.
Dowlais shares are down about 25% over the past 12 months, as it was caught up in a broader downturn in the car industry.
Britain's benchmark index, the FTSE 100, reached a record high as investors reacted positively to strong corporate updates and soothing comments by U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. Companies like Shell and Watches of Switzerland Group contributed significantly to the index's rise,
European and US markets were in positive territory as investors continue to digest the potential impact of DeepSeek.
(Reuters) - The UK's FTSE 100 stalled on Thursday after touching a record high in the prior session as investors sought clarity on U.S. President Donald Trump's trade policies, while shares in CMC Markets tumbled on a disappointing forecast.
​​​FTSE 100, DAX 40 and Nasdaq 100 drop amid China growth contraction and AI concerns. ​The FTSE 100 is swiftly coming off Friday's 's record high at 8,587 amid renewed US tariff threats but seems to be finding support marginally above its key 8,419-to-8,372 support zone. This is expected to hold.
The Nasdaq Composite last night closed 3.1% lower after tech industry valuations were shaken by the emergence of China AI chatbot DeepSeek. Chipmaker Nvidia lost 17% or $600 billion of its value, alongside falls of 10% for Arm Holdings and 2% for Microsoft.
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