Daily Mail

FTSE weighed down by miserable mining stocks

- By Calum Muirhead

MINING stocks weighed on the FTSE100 as fears of a global economic slowdown sent commodity prices tumbling.

Mexican precious metals miner Fresnillo slumped 8.9pc, or 68.8p, to 704.4p, Endeavour Mining fell 7pc, or 136p, to 1801p, Glencore dropped 4.4pc, or 21p, to 455p, Anglo American lost 4.6pc, or 155p, to 3242.5p, Antofagast­a slipped 4.5pc, or 62.5p, to 1340p, BHP eased 2.9pc, or 76p, to 2535p and Rio Tinto shed 2.9pc, or 154p, to 5203p.

The sector was not helped by analysts at Deutsche Bank, who cut their target price for Anglo, BHP and glencore while downgradin­g Rio to ‘hold’ from ‘buy’.

investors were concerned that splutterin­g growth in China, as its economy was disrupted by Covid19 lockdowns, as well as rising inflation and interest rate hikes across the world, will slam the brakes on global demand for raw materials.

The bleak mood sent the FTSE 100 tumbling 1.6pc, or 114.32 points, to 7233.34 and the FTSE 250 sank 0.9pc, or 166.27 points, to 19480.88. Market sentiment was knocked by bleak gDP data which showed the economy shrank by 0.1pc in March as the cost of living crisis began to bite.

The figure was worse than predicted and stoked fears of a looming recession as consumers cut back on spending amid soaring energy bills and tax rises.

Meanwhile, Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust, which counts firms such as Tesla and Amazon among its biggest holdings, tumbled 3.8pc, or 30p, to 750.8p.

The fund, a popular choice among investors, has lost nearly 45pc of its value so far this year amid growing fears momentum of the high-growth tech sector will be unable to withstand the cocktail of inflation, rising interest rates and geopolitic­al worries weighing on the global economy.

The decline also meant Scottish Mortgage lost its status as the UK’s largest investment trust, being overtaken by private equity investor 3i Group (down 1.2pc, or 15.5p, to 1272.5p).

‘Once seen as a superstar vehicle for the world’s next big things in the world of business, Scottish Mortgage has lost its shine big time,’ said AJ Bell investment director Russ Mould.

Other listed funds with exposure to the tech sector and the wider US market also came under pressure. Baillie Gifford US Growth Trust was down 0.7pc, or 1.2p, to 162.2p and Allianz Technology Trust slumped 3.1pc, or 7p, to 218p. Another mid-cap fund, Chrysalis Investment­s, which has holdings in UK tech firms including ecommerce group THG (up 3.7pc, or 3.95p, to 111.85p) and money transfer firm Wise (up 4pc, or 12.9p, to 332.7p), also fell 9pc, or 12p, to 122p amid mounting investor worries about the sector’s growth potential.

RHI Magnesita, a supplier of equipment for steel foundries, jumped 5.5pc, or 124p, to 2366p after it flagged profits in the first quarter of 2022 had been ‘materially higher’ year-on-year.

The firm highlighte­d ‘robust’ demand for its products in the period and noted that increased costs due to inflation were being passed onto customers.

FTSE 250 landlord Grainger gained 3.1pc, or 8.8p, to 289.8p following a strong set of half-year results. The group reported a 23pc rise in rental income in the six months to the end of March, while pre-tax profits more than doubled to £99m.

Drinks bottler Coca-Cola HBC was one of the strongest blue-chip risers yesterday, up 5.6pc, or 89p, to 1687p, after it delivered revenue growth of 26pc in the first quarter of the year. The company was also considerin­g ‘all options’ for its Russian business after suspending activity in the country following the invasion of Ukraine.

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