The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

London index on rise again as oil prices head upwards

-

London’s blue-chip index climbed back above the 7,300 mark yesterday as rising oil prices helped to push up commodity stocks.

The FTSE 100 finished the day 39.82 points, or 0.55%, higher at 7,313.4.

A barrel of Brent Crude was at one point trading above $80 US on the back of investor fears that Donald Trump’s Iran sanctions could hurt production levels. Hurricane Florence’s approach towards the US also contribute­d for high demand for oil.

Shares in BP and Royal Dutch Shell rose by 8.9p and 24p respective­ly.

Mining stocks also rose higher, despite bubbling fears of a trade war. Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton were up 48.5p and 21.6p respective­ly.

The pound stayed flat against the dollar at $1.303 US, but dipped against the Euro to below $1.121 euros.

Dunelm shares closed 60.5p higher at 582p despite posting a 6.7% fall in underlying pre-tax profits to £102 million for the year to June 30.

Investors were relieved not to see any downgrades after a challengin­g summer, while likefor-like sales ticked up 4.2%, with stores up 1% and online up 37.9%. In Europe, the DAX was up 0.52% and France’s CAC rose 0.92%.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were British American Tobacco up 208.p to 3,763p, Imperial Brands up 83p to 2,691.5p, Glencore up 8.2p to 295.1p, and Antofagast­a up 18.4p to 758.8p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were SSE, down 103.5p to 1,147p, Centrica, down 5.4p to 144.35p, Ocado down 22p to 933p and CRH down 48p to 2,437p.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom