The Scotsman

FTSE edges lower as US jobs data weighs on markets

Market report

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The FTSE finished marginally lower after earlier gains were dragged back by hot jobs data from the US.

Friday’s non-farm payroll figures knocked back the US markets and weighed on sentiment across Europe as a result.

London trading was more robust than other parts of Europe, drifting from intra-day highs but keeping the FTSE noticeably higher for the week as a whole.

The FTSE 100 finished the day down 2.26 points, or 0.03%, at 7,556.23.

Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets UK, said: “European markets slipped back from their highs of the week, in the wake of an unexpected­ly strong US labour market report for November, which saw 263,000 jobs added in November.

“The numbers have also done little to undermine what has been a strong week for the FTSE 100, which has been helped by hopes of a relaxation of Covid restrictio­ns in China, while the Dax has broadly traded sideways from last week’s close.

“The resilience of the US jobs numbers, while welcome, has acted as a brake on market gains as investors price out the prospect of an imminent sharp slowdown in US rate-hiking intentions.’’

The Dax improved 0.27% by the end of the session and the French Cac finished 0.17% lower.

In the US, the Nasdaq took particular­ly heavy losses as higher yields impacted tech firms hard while the S&P 500 also slipped.

Meanwhile, sterling held on to its gains despite a rally for the dollar following the better-thanexpect­ed jobs figures.

The pound was up 0.27% against the dollar at 1.229 and was 0.32% higher against the euro at 1.168 at the close.

In company news, Cineworld shares were higher on the back of reports in The Times that rival Vue could make a consolidat­ion play for the larger rival.

Shares in Cineworld, the world’s second largest cinema group, have plunged this year after it filed for US bankruptcy protection after suffering weak audience figures over the summer. Cineworld finished the day up 0.198p at 4.8p. Mind Gym was flat at the end of trading after it had to lean heavily on its US business to keep growing in the last six months, as the business managed to expand its profit many times over.

The profession­al coaching firm stayed at 92.5p after it revealed that revenue grew 11% to £26.8 million in the six months to the end of September when compared to the same period a year earlier Asos fell by 3.5p to 640p after interim finance chief Katy Mecklenbur­gh confirmed plans to leave the fashion giant in favour of IT infrastruc­ture firm Softcat.

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