The Scotsman

Unilever helps lift FTSE 100 into the green ahead of new UK inflation data

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The FTSE 100 moved higher on Tuesday with investors in good spirits ahead of an expected drop in the rate of UK inflation and a strong session for consumer goods giant Unilever.

The UK’S top stock market index was up 15.75 points or 0.2 per cent to close at 7,738.3.

Unilever was leading the charge with shares up by 3 per cent, after the company announced an overhaul which includes spinning off its ice cream business and axing 7,500 jobs around the world.

AJ Bell’s head of financial analysis, Danni Hewson, said: “Unilever has topped the FTSE 100 after announcing thousands of job cuts and doubling down on its promise to do fewer things better and with greater impact.

“To that end, its decision to spin off its ice cream business has succeeded in doing two things.

“It has shown investors that chief executive Hein Schumacher is seriously focused on delivering what he’s promised, and it has set the jungle drums beating about where this tasty new company might decide to call home.”

The gains helped offset bigger losses for rival consumer goods group Reckitt Benckiser, with shares trading about 4.5 per cent lower.

Meanwhile, traders will be gearing up for expected good news on UK inflation, which is predicted to have fallen to its lowest level in nearly two and a half years in February.

Official data for February released on Wednesday could reinforce expectatio­ns that the Bank of England is moving closer to cutting interest rates this year.

Elsewhere in Europe, Germany’s Dax was up 0.31 per cent and France’s Cac 40 closed 0.65 per cent higher.

In the US, the S&P 500 was up by 0.35 per cent and Dow Jones was 0.75 per cent higher, ahead of the Federal Reserve’s latest interest rate decision announceme­nt on Wednesday.

The pound was more or less flat against the US dollar at 1.2725 and the euro at 1.1715.

In other company news, shares in DFS were down 6 per cent after the furniture retailer cut its sales and profits targets for the year, citing weaker demand over the past two months.

The company told shareholde­rs that order volumes dropped 16 per cent year-on-year across January and February. It also warned that profits could be knocked further by ongoing disruption to shipments in the Red Sea.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Unilever, up 117.5p to 3929p, Rolls-royce, up 10.7p to 400.7p, IAG, up 3.45p to 159.9p, Ashtead, up 112p to 5,312p, and BAE Systems, up 22.5p to 1,327.5p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Reckitt, down 207p to 4368p, Fresnillo, down 19.8p to 441.4p, Airtel Africa, down 3.75p to 90.7p, Burberry, down 26p to 1,230p, and Persimmon, down 26.5p to 1,263p.

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