The Scotsman

FTSE suffers transatlan­tic contagion

- Market report Emma Newlands

The London markets slumped into the red after a poor star t to trading in the US weighed down on European sentiment.

Anthony Fauci’s warning that there is doubt that a vaccine will be developed by the end of October took wind out of the bulls’ sails in the US and prompted wide selling in Europe. The FTSE 100 closed 90.09 points lower at 5,850.86.

Con nor Campbell, financial analyst at Spreadex, said: “In a sharp turnaround from [Thursday] morning, every major Western index turned negative on Thursday.

“After having its best day since mid July last night, surging 450 points on a combinatio­n of relatively unfounded vaccine and stimulus speculatio­n, the Dow Jones suffered a setback en route to its record highs.

“With the US open souring the tone of trading, and little of their own to celebrate, the FTSE and [German] Dax swung into the red.”

The Dow Jones, the S&P and Nasdaq all slumped as traders turned their backs on US tech stocks, which had been particular­ly buoyant in recent months.

Meanwhile, sterling slipped lower against a rise in the dollar and a dip in sentiment after the UK services PMI figure for August came in below the initial flash reading.

The pound fell by 0.84 per cent versus the US dollar at $1.327 and was down 0.23 per cent against the euro at €1.121.

In company news, energy giant SSE saw shares dip after Britain’s energy regulator fined it more than £2 million for a 2016 blunder likely to have pushed up wholesale electricit­y costs.

Ofgem said it would send a “strong message” to energy producers that they must share timely informatio­n with others on the market. Shares in SSE closed 30p lower at 1,230p as a result.

Elsewhere, Revolution Bars shares lifted after the chain said it smashed expectatio­ns last month after the UK government’s pledge to give diners discounted meals made people flock to its sites.

It closed 0.5p higher at 15p after it said sales on Eat Out to Help Out days were 188.4 per cent of the equivalent days last year.

Jet2 airline owner Dart Group nudged 11p higher to 688.5p after it said bookings to date for summer 2021 are “encouragin­g”.

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