The Herald

FTSE-100 flirts with 7,500-point mark but falls short

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SHARES in London’s FTSE100 index came within touching distance of 7,500 points briefly yesterday but could not muster enough to pass the line, despite oil and tobacco companies doing their best to help out.

By the end of the day, the FTSE-100 had gained just

0.3 per cent, a 20-point rise, which left it at 7,486.67.

The index briefly touched a day high of 7,497 as cigarette makers Imperial Brands and British American Tobacco rubbed shoulders with BP and Shell at the top of the pile.

“The week looks set to go out with a whimper rather than a bang, with the risk rally stuck on pause for the time being,” said Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at online trading platform IG.

“The FTSE-100 certainly looks in need of something to move it on, with the index having barely moved over the last three sessions.

“It now seems vulnerable to at least a short-term drop, although if oil prices can rejoin the risk party at least there is hope that oil stocks can help prop the index for the time being.”

In the US, traders seemed mildly positive on their return from Thanksgivi­ng.

The S&P 500 had gained 0.1% by the close of play in Europe and the Dow Jones was up 0.5%.

“The return of US traders has seen the Dow push higher while tech stocks edge back, but, as is to be expected, the session has a very lacklustre feel to it,” Mr Beauchamp said.

“European stocks too have struggled to mount a serious move in either direction – everyone seems to just want to get to the weekend without any unpleasant surprises.

“Risk assets continue to hold up well, and while the seasonalit­y from here on to year-end is usually positive for stocks, it would be nice to have some actual good news on which to base a rally.”

Germany’s Dax index was flat while the CAC-40 in Paris gained 0.1%. The pound dipped 0.1 cents against the greenback, dropping to $1.21.

In company news, energy giant SSE said it would sell a quarter of its power transmissi­on network business to one of the world’s biggest pension funds.

Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan Board will pay

£1.5 billion for the 25% stake in SSEN Transmissi­on.

The company said this deal could “help unlock significan­t growth,” for both SSEN Transmissi­on and SSE generally. Gregor Alexander, finance director of SSE, will chair the business, with Ontario Teachers’ getting a proportion­al representa­tion on the board.

Shares in SSE were barely impacted by the news.

The biggest risers on the FTSE-100 were Airtel Africa, up 1.7p to 122.3p; Smith & Nephew, up 14.5p to 1,103.5p; Imperial Brands, up 26p to 2,126p; Frasers Group, up 10p to 888p; and BAE Systems, up 9p to 806.8p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Ocado Group, down 649.8p to 5,476.31p; United Utilities, down 21.5p to 1,064.5p; Centrica, down 1.88p to 93.94p; Endeavor Mining, down 30p to 1,683p; and RS Group, down 16.5p to 941.5p.

 ?? ?? The FTSE-100 index edged higher
The FTSE-100 index edged higher

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