The Herald

UK GDP disappoint­s but FTSE-100 ends with gain

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A STRONG opening by US stocks helped the FTSE-100 complete a major turnaround to nudge into the green after statistici­ans revealed that UK gross domestic product growth in May fell below expectatio­ns.

The index opened in decline after the Office for National Statistics revealed only 1.8 per cent economic growth, but shot into positive territory after the US indices opened for trading.

Trading had also taken a hit from a stark warning by the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity (OBR) that the economy may not return to its pre-virus peak until 2024.

London’s top-flight closed 3.56 points higher at 6,179.75.

Connor Campbell, financial analyst at Spreadex, said: “The FTSE managed the biggest turnaround, cutting its losses to a quarter of what they were in the aftermath of [the] disappoint­ing May GDP and the subsequent warnings that came from the OBR.”

The value of the pound slipped lower as sentiment was hit by the GDP reading, the OBR’S warning over the sustained impact of the crisis and wider caution ahead of more data today, with the latest UK inflation reading.

The pound slid 0.07% versus the US dollar at 1.254 and was down 0.58% against the euro at 1.100.

The major European markets tumbled as continued health concerns and rising tensions in relation to China weighed on stocks.

The German Dax decreased by 0.97%, while the French

Cac moved 1.15% lower.

Across the Atlantic, the Dow Jones opened higher as positive figures from JP Morgan set the tone despite continued concerns over the consistent­ly high number of Covid-19 cases in the country.

BT Group was a star performer in the FTSE-100 after the UK Government gave it longer than expected to remove Huawei equipment from its 5G mobile network.

The UK Government said telecoms companies would need to remove all of the Chinese tech giant’s equipment from their networks by 2027. BT moved 4.5p higher to 115.6p.

Elsewhere in company news, shares in Ocado slipped after it posted first-half pre-tax losses of £40.6 million after it spent heavily on the roll-out of its overseas technology offering.

The company also reported a 27% jump in retail revenues to £1.02 billion due to “unpreceden­ted” demand during the six months to May 31.

Shares closed down 44.5p at 1,988.5p.

Soft drink manufactur­er Fever-tree saw shares fall after it was hit heavily by the closure of bars and restaurant­s.

The company also said it saw sales at UK supermarke­ts and shops jump by more than a third in the past three months. Shares were down 118p at 2,300p at the close of play on Tuesday.

Eyewear manufactur­er Inspecs saw shares jump after it acquired the manufactur­ing operations of lens manufactur­er Norville from administra­tors. Inspecs shares moved 15p higher to 210p.

The price of oil moved higher as it rebounded from Monday’s session. The price of a barrel of Brent crude oil increased by 2.08 to 43.1 US dollars.

 ??  ?? BT shares rose. Picture: Chris Radburn/ PA.
BT shares rose. Picture: Chris Radburn/ PA.

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