The Scotsman

London markets rise over russian plans ‘to scale back military activity’

Market report

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The FTSE climbed on Tuesday on claims that Russiaissc­alingbacko­perationsa­roundkyiva­nd an end to a recent rally in oil prices.

Moscow said it would make the move after “meaningful’’ peace talks in Istanbul, although traders continued to take the comments with a pinch of salt.

London’s top-flight index ended the day up 64.11 points, or 0.86%, at 7,537.25 points.

The other major European markets were also positive, with French banks driving a sharp improvemen­t in the Cac 40.

The Cac was up 3.08% and the German Dax had increased 0.22% by the end of the session.

Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG, said: “European markets rallied hard on hopes of some kind of deal being hammered out that allows both sides to save face, and oil prices dropped on hopes that supply will recover, although it is unlikely that sanctions will end soon given western wariness about rushing back to normal relations with Putin.

“The economic outlook is still not promising, either, and with US earnings season looming there is still doubt that equities can hold on to their recent gains.’’

In the US, the main markets opened higher after thelatestu­sconsumerc­onfidenced­ataincreas­ed beyond expectatio­ns.

The price of oil had another volatile session, with the situation in Ukraine adding to concerns that Shanghai lockdown measures could impact demand.

Brent crude dropped by 2.95% to 109.16 US dollars per barrel when the London markets closed.

Sterling’s recent rally lost steam as it dropped against a dollar boosted by positive economic figures.

The pound decreased by 0.14% against the dollar to 1.311, and also fell 0.14% against the euro to 1.181.

In company news, Barclays was once again a heavy loser on the FTSE after one of the bank’s biggest investors sold an almost £900 million stake hours after it confirmed on Monday that a blunder could cost it £450 million.

The disposal, which was completed overnight, saw the unnamed seller offload roughly 575 million shares at 150p per share.

The company’s stock dropped by 4.04p to 156.44p at the close of play as a result.

Chemicals giant Croda Internatio­nal made gains after it laid out plans to reach £1 billion of sales through its consumer care business by 2025. Shares finished 370p higher at 7,894p.

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