FTSE falls back after two-year Wall St high

clock

The FTSE fell back from yesterday's 31-month closing high in early trading Thursday, despite strong global gains overnight following a successful bond sale in Portugal.

London's leading index is 25 points, or 0.43%, down at 6,024. It closed Wednesday at 6,050, a 31-month closing high after a 0.6% gain. Supermarket behemoth Tesco is more than 2% lower after reporting a sharp fall in sales over the festive period because of disruption caused by the snow. Meanwhile, Xstrata, Diageo and British Airways have all opened lower. On the upside, engineering group IMI added almost 50p to 959p. Overnight in New York, the Dow Jones closed at a fresh two-year high, up 83 points to 11,755, after Portugal’s successful bond auction eased fears about another sov...

To continue reading this article...

Join Professional Adviser for free

  • Unlimited access to real-time news, industry insights and market intelligence
  • Stay ahead of the curve with spotlights on emerging trends and technologies
  • Receive breaking news stories straight to your inbox in the daily newsletters
  • Make smart business decisions with the latest developments in regulation, investing retirement and protection
  • Members-only access to the editor’s weekly Friday commentary
  • Be the first to hear about our events and awards programmes

Join

 

Already a Professional Adviser member?

Login

More on Economics / Markets

FCA's Rathi addresses Autumn Budget market abuse concerns

FCA's Rathi addresses Autumn Budget market abuse concerns

Pens open letter to Treasury Committee

Isabel Baxter
clock 04 December 2025 • 2 min read
More tax, less shelter: A slow-burn Budget for savers and investors

More tax, less shelter: A slow-burn Budget for savers and investors

'The Budget documents make for sobering reading for those trying to build up their wealth'

Laith Khalaf
clock 04 December 2025 • 3 min read
OBR 'deeply regrets' early release of Budget document

OBR 'deeply regrets' early release of Budget document

Mistaken release of Budget documents forced Richard Hughes' resignation

Linus Uhlig
clock 02 December 2025 • 3 min read