The Scotsman

Dow Jones breaches 30,000 for first time in history as biden picks yellen

-

New York’s Dow Jones reached a historic mark on Tuesday as it broke through 30,000 points for the first time in the index’s 124-year history.

Traders reacted positively to the news that former chair of the Federal Reserve Janet Yellen is set to be Joe Biden’s Treasury Secretary.

The Dow was also helped across the finishing line by General Electric, the only member of the original dozen to still be counted in the index.

Shares in the company jumped after analysts at Oppenheime­r revalued the stock.

But the Dow’s rise was also mirrored in London and other European capitals. As the day ended, the FTSE 100 was up 1.6per cent, or 98.33 points, at 6,432.17.

“It took the US to open for the markets to really display their delight at the start of the formal transition process to the Joe Biden administra­tion this Tuesday,” said Spreadex expert Connor Campbell.

“Relief that the Democrats can hopefully hit the ground running when it comes to tackling Covid-19 in January, as well as the positive impact the pro-spending former Fed chair Janet Yellen is expected to make as Treasury Secretary drove the Dow Jones to record highs.”

On the continent, the Dax in Germany rose 1.3per cent, and the Cac in France was up 0.4per cent. The Dow was up 1.6per cent at 30,077, and the S&P 500 1.5per cent shortly after European markets closed.

BP topped the FTSE 100 in London, rising 8.4per cent over the day not far ahead of other natural resource giants, including Antofagast­a, Glencore, BHP and Shell.

The oil giant was boosted by the price of its product, as Brent crude soared by 3.7per cent to 47.75 dollars per barrel.

CMC Markets analyst David Madden said: “The rally in commoditie­s like platinum, copper and oil has given a boost to Glencore, Antofagast­a, BHP Group, BP and Royal Dutch Shell.

“The airline sector has also enjoyed a big rally too. England will soften its quarantine rules - whereby passengers to the country will have to self-isolate for five days and then if they pass a Covid-19 test, they will no longer have to quarantine.”

Rolls-royce, which makes airplane engines, rose more than 8per cent, Premier Inn owner Whitbread nearly 7per cent, and travel group TUI jumped 16per cent.

Meat producer Cranswick was helped by high demand for sausages to boost its operating profit from £47 million to £62 million in the first half of the year. Shares rose slightly by 0.3per cent.

Caterer Compass has saw annual profits drop 76per cent, it said on Tuesday morning, and warned it might have to overhaul the business. But investors were not put off and sent shares up 2.5per cent.

Pets at Home was helped to a smaller 0.5per cent rise after revealing that sales had surged 12.5per cent during the summer.

The board of breakdown experts AA asked for another 24 hours for potential buyers to make a formal offer. Shares dropped 0.5per cent.

Countrywid­e’s shareholde­rs defeated a proposal that would see £90 million worth of private equity money being pumped into the indebted business. The deal would have taken Alchemy Partners’s share in the business from half to more than two thirds. Shares dropped 2.8per cent.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were BP, up 21.35p to 274.8p, Rolls-royce, up 8.75p to 115.75p, Antofagast­a, up 84.5p to 1226p, Barclays, up 10p to 150.2p, and Whitbread, up 206p to 3287p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Homeserve, down 81p to 1047p, JD Sports, down 52.8p to 760p, Intertek Group, down 390p to 5682p, Spirax-sarco, down 550p to 10965p, and Experian, down 135p to 2727p

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom