London's FTSE Closes Below 6000

greenspun.com : LUSENET : Grassroots Information Coordination Center (GICC) : One Thread

BBC

Tuesday, 20 February, 2001, 17:14 GMT London's FTSE closes below 6,000

The UK's main stock index has closed at its lowest level for 16 months, as US shares failed to provide the lift investors had hoped for.

The FTSE 100 index, which measures the share price among the UK's top listed firms, ended Tuesday down 113.9 points at 5,980.1.

The index has not closed below the key 6,000 level since April.

Traders blamed the slide on a weak opening by US stocks, which provide the lead for investors worldwide.

US malaise

While the FTSE had opened steadily, another torrid day for banking stocks, compounded by a lack of direction in the main US indices, the Dow Jones and Nasdaq, saw UK shares slump sharply in late afternoon trade.

"There is still this general malaise coming out of the US," said Deutsche Bank economist Bob Semple.

The Nasdaq, which declined 5% on Friday, had lost a further 2.3% by 1700GMT on Tuesday. The market was closed on Monday for a US holiday.

"Nasdaq was expected to open up and it opened down," said Alex Stewart of Dresdner Kleinwort Wasserstein. "The FTSE just plummeted through resistance levels."

Japanese shares, meanwhile, are hovering near their lowest level for 28 months.

Mortgage war

UK bank stocks weakened on Tuesday as the Halifax announced a low cost mortgage, stoking the war in the sector which broke out on Monday when Nationwide announced it would drop its rates.

Shares in Royal Bank of Scotland fell 4.2% on Tuesday, with Alliance & Leicester stock shedding 3.67%, and Halifax closing 3.46% lower.

Analysts also noted the weakness in shares in mobile phone giant Vodafone which was overtaken on Monday by BP Amoco as the UK's most valuable company.

Despite an early rise, the mood changed later with its shares closing 8p lower at 190p.

"Vodafone has not produced the bounce that some people were expecting, and is still below 200p, which is a little worrying," said Tony Jackson, strategist at ING Barings Charterhouse Securities.

Vodafone's decline pulled down other telecoms firms with it, including British Telecom which ended 3.9% lower at 586p.

Outlook for UK shares

The loser board was headed by pharmaceuticals giant GlaxoSmithKline, which fell 5.3%, more than wiping out 2.2% rise in the firm's stock on Monday.

Traders blamed profit-taking for the decline ahead of the firm's results statement, due out on Wednesday.

The outlook for UK shares when markets reopen on Wednesday depends largely on the performance of US stocks, Dresdner's Alex Stewart said.

"We have to wait for the close of the Nasdaq," he said.

Search BBC News Online

Advanced search options

BBC RADIO NEWS

BBC ONE TV NEWS

WORLD NEWS SUMMARY

BBC NEWS 24 BULLETIN

PROGRAMMES GUIDE

The Markets: 23:54 UK FTSE 100 5980.1 -113.9 Dow Jones 10730.88 -68.9 Nasdaq 2318.35 -107.0 FTSE delayed by 15 mins, Dow and Nasdaq by 20 mins

See also:

20 Feb 01 | Business Tech slump spreads to Japan 17 Feb 01 | UK 'Economic damage' risk from Iraq raids 16 Feb 01 | Business Tech giants wield axe 15 Dec 00 | Review Dot.com to Dot.bomb 04 Jan 01 | Business Trouble ahead in Asia and Europe? Internet links:

Nasdaq London stock exchange

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top Business stories now:

Tyremaker orders another recall London's FTSE closes below 6,000 Halifax stokes mortgage war Exxon loses $500m damages case Oil price dips on sanctions talks Credit where credit is due French carriers hit turbulence Wal-Mart has 'weathered the worst' Links to more Business stories are at the foot of the page.

-- Rachel Gibson (rgibson@hotmail.com), February 20, 2001


Moderation questions? read the FAQ