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By

LONDON: Britain’s stock indexes climbed on Friday, finishing the week higher, after the US Supreme Court struck down President Donald Trump’s tariffs, while expectations of a Bank of England rate cut in March and easing concerns over AI disruption also lifted sentiment.

The blue-chip FTSE 100 closed up 0.5 percent after hitting a record high in intraday trading at 10,745.76 points. The index also marked its biggest weekly jump since mid-December.

The domestically focused FTSE 250 rose 0.7 percent and ended the week higher. The US Supreme Court on Friday struck down Trump’s sweeping tariffs, but Britain said it still expects its privileged trading relationship with the United States to remain in place. Meanwhile, geopolitical tensions in the oil-rich Middle East and the greater likelihood of defence cooperation within Europe helped defence stocks gain 6.7 percent this week. On the earnings front, Aston Martin fell 1.4 percent after the luxury carmaker warned of a bigger annual loss and said it plans to sell the right to use its name on the Aston Martin F1 Team to bolster its finances after a challenging year.

The broader auto sector lost 1.4 percent and was among the few sectors in the red. Anglo American posted a USD3.7 billion loss following another write-down in its diamonds business.

However, shares added 1 percent, tracking higher base and precious metal prices. Investors were relieved by data earlier this week that showed inflation was steadily nearing the central bank’s 2 percent target. Strong manufacturing activity data and retail sales numbers on Friday, however, pointed to the risk of price pressures flaring up.

Still, traders see a 78 percent chance that the central bank will cut interest rates by 25 basis points when it meets next month to shore up the labour market.

Chris Beauchamp, chief market analyst at IG Group, said that the FTSE has become a rare safe haven this year, with cheap valuations and steady momentum pulling investors out of overheated US tech names, while the broader risk-on tone remains in place.

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