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Markets

Commodities push UK’s FTSE 100 lower on demand fears

Published September 7, 2022 Updated September 7, 2022 02:06pm
By

UK’s FTSE 100 fell on Wednesday, dented by oil and mining stocks after soft trade data from China spurred fears about global demand, while worries over recession and aggressive monetary tightening in major economies also weighed on sentiment.

The commodity-heavy FTSE 100 fell 0.8% and the mid-cap FTSE 250 dropped 0.5% by 0801 GMT.

Shares of oil majors BP and Shell slipped 1.2% each, as crude prices tumbled on COVID-19 curbs in top importer China.

Mining stocks fell 2.5%, as the greenback strengthened after U.S. economic data reinforced the view that the Federal Reserve will continue aggressive policy tightening.

“China is the workshop of the world. If Chinese exports are falling dramatically that implies demand outside China is dropping, meaning the global economy is slowing down at a time when traders are expecting more rate hikes from various central banks,” said David Madden, a market analyst with Equiti Capital.

Banks, retailers lift UK’s FTSE 100

Further weighing on Rio Tinto, a U.S. judge said the Anglo-Australian mining giant must face an investor lawsuit accusing it of concealing delays and huge cost overruns at a Mongolian copper and gold mine owned by Turquoise Hill Resources Ltd, in which Rio Tinto has a majority stake.

British Prime Minister Liz Truss will set out plans to tackle soaring energy bills this week, Deputy Prime Minister Therese Coffey said, but declined to discuss who will foot the bill for what is set to be a costly intervention.

“If the markets feel whatever she delivers isn’t enough to actually cover for the time being, we’ll probably see a sell-off in British stocks and the pound,” said Madden.

Shares of AstraZeneca slid 1.2% as Morgan Stanley cut the drugmaker’s rating to “equal-weight” from “overweight”.

WH Smith fell 3.1% after the British retailer forecast its annual results to be in line with expectations, even as its revenue gained on rapid recovery in European summer travel.

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