Markets Rise as Commodities Gain, Euro Fears Abate
Financials attracted buyers on Tuesday, led by Man Group, while natural resource stocks benefitted from higher prices
The FTSE 100 index ticked up 44.8 points to close 0.9% firmer at 5,307.3, while the FTSE 250 index took on 61.2 points or 0.6% to 9,993.2. Wall Street reversed early losses in late deals Monday, setting the tone for European trade the following morning and continuing the upward momentum at the time of the UK close on the back of decent US economic data.
US housing starts rose 5.8% in April as compared to March, higher than the 3.8% growth expected by economists, while producer prices fell 0.1% in April from the previous month and were up 0.2% excluding volatile energy prices. This low level of inflation could give the Fed fodder to keep interest rates low for an extended period.
The weaker US dollar helped spur investors to seek out riskier assets and fuelled commodity prices, in turn pushing miners and oil producers higher in London deals. As such, Rio Tinto, Anglo American and Lonmin featured on the FTSE 100 leaderboard, climbing between 2.1% and 2.7% each.
A range of financial stocks also benefited from the temporary return of risk appetites. Banks and broader financials have been under severe pressure amid concerns over exposure to sovereign debt contagion, but on Tuesday interdealer broker ICAP jumped 5.0%, London Stock Exchange was 3.5% higher, and insurer Aviva added 1.9%. Banks Lloyds Banking Group, Royal Bank of Scotland and Barclays rose 0.4%-1.5% apiece. But it was Man Group that led the gainers with a surge of 9.1% that saw the world’s largest listed hedge fund by market cap recoup all of the previous day’s losses, triggered by news of its acquisition of GLG Group.
Among the blue-chip fallers was a handful of defensive plays, such as GlaxoSmithKline (0.6% weaker), Imperial Tobacco (down 0.5%) and Shire (off 0.4%). Vodafone was also a tad behind, easing 0.3%, after the mobile giant’s full-year results, which were accompanied by an upbeat outlook statement, were marred by a £2.3 billion impairment charge on its Indian operations.