Western Morning News

On this day

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1531: About 20,000 people died in an earthquake in Lisbon.

1797: £1 notes were first issued by the Bank of England.

1815: Napoleon escaped from exile on the island of Elba and returned to France. 1839: The Grand National was first run at Aintree.

1846: William Frederick Cody - Buffalo Bill - American army scout and showman, was born in Scott County, Iowa.

1935: Radar (Radio Detection and Ranging) was first demonstrat­ed in Daventry by Robert Watson-Watt.

1936: The Volkswagen car factory was opened in Saxony by Adolf Hitler.

1950: Scottish music hall singer and comedian Sir Harry Lauder died, aged

79.

1983: Irishman Pat Jennings became the first footballer to play in 1,000 first-class football matches.

1989: Burke’s Peerage reported that King Arthur’s Round Table had been found near Stirling, Scotland, on the banks of the Carron River.

ON THIS DAY LAST YEAR: Facebook announced it would ban ads that promise to cure coronaviru­s or incite panic around the outbreak.

Birthdays

Sandie Shaw, singer, 74, pictured; David Edgar, playwright, 73; Helen Clark, former New Zealand prime minister, 71; Michael Bolton, singer/ songwriter, 68; Erykah Badu, singer/ actress, 50; Shane Williams, Welsh rugby player, 44; Corinne Bailey Rae, singer/songwriter, 42.

THE FTSE 100 was dragged into negative territory at the end of trading after US data raised inflation fears while government borrowing costs also increased in Europe.

Wall Street opened lower and weighed on trader sentiment in London after betterthan-expected jobless figures and durable goods orders. The positive economic data unnerved some investors who are concerned that it could mean inflation will start to tick up and prompt tighter monetary policy.

London’s top flight closed 7.01 points, or 0.11%, lower at 6,651.96 at the close of play on Thursday.

Across the continent, the major markets were also cautious and tumbled into the red late in the session. The German Dax was 0.54% lower and the French Cac moved 0.24% lower.

Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets UK, said: “European markets have once again flattered to deceive today, starting off in promising fashion, before slipping back into the close, with US markets, and rising bond yields acting as a drag.

“While rising US yields have been attracting the most attention, we’re also seeing some evidence of a tightening of financial conditions here in Europe, with sharp rises in government borrowing costs from Germany to Greece.

“The European Central Bank certainly appears to be becoming concerned about just such a scenario with chief economist Philip Lane saying that the ECB is prepared to buy bonds flexibly in order to prevent just such a fiscal tightening.”

Meanwhile, sterling recoiled after hitting an almost three-year high against the dollar on Wednesday. The pound decreased by 0.3% versus the US dollar to 1.410 and was down 0.75% against the euro at 1.153.

In company news, Standard Chartered was one of the day’s biggest fallers after it revealed that its profits were cut by more than half. The Asia-focused bank saw pre-tax profits tumble 57% to 1.6 billion US dollars (£1.1 billion) in 2020 after it booked a major charge due to loan losses related to the pandemic. Shares fell by 31.4p to 478p at the close.

DS Smith was sat high at the opposite end of the FTSE amid speculatio­n that the packaging giant could be the target of a takeover offer from rival Mondi. Shares in the company closed 21.9p higher at 405.9p after Bloomberg reported the interest from Mondi.

Aston Martin’s shares jumped despite the luxury car manufactur­er posting a slump in annual sales and profits, as its latest revenue figures came in ahead of expectatio­ns. Shares climbed by 136p to 2,137p as a result.

The price of oil jumped to a 13-month high earlier on Thursday before losing steam to sit broadly flat. The price of Brent crude oil decreased by 0.03% to 66.99 dollars per barrel.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Evraz, up 33.6p to 598.4p, DS Smith, up 21.9p to 405.9p, Anglo American, up 112p to 2953.5p, Rio Tinto, up 125p to 6480p, and BP, up 5.75p to 304.55p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Standard Chartered, down 31.4p to 478p, Intermedia­te Capital Group, down 90p to 1811p, Polymetal, down 54.5p to 1452p, Persimmon, down 93p to 2671p, and Berkeley, down 145p to 4172p.

 ?? Tony Jarram ?? > American scout, hunter and showman, William Frederick Cody – ‘Buffalo Bill’
Tony Jarram > American scout, hunter and showman, William Frederick Cody – ‘Buffalo Bill’
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