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FTSE 100 Index rises but pound slumps on EU jitters

Published: 08:50 06 Jun 2016 BST

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The FTSE 100 Index rose 47 points to 6257 in early trading in London, although the pound slumped amid EU referendum fears.

The top five blue-chip risers were all miners as the price of a barrel of Brent Crude Oil rose 1.2% to US$50.2. Anglo American PLC (LON:AAL) was the biggest beneficiary, up 6.1% at 655.4p. 

Housebuilders led the fallers, with Berkeley Group Holdings PLC (LON:BKG) the largest loser, down 1.88% to 3178.

But sterling dropped nearly 1% against the dollar and the euro as a few polls showed that the Vote Leave campaign in the UK's EU referendum was gaining ground.

Connor Campbell at spread-betting firm Spreadex said: "The currency is continuing to feel the ragged to-ing and fro-ing of the duelling EU referendum campaigns."

Small-cap indices were in positive territory, with the FTSE AIM 100 rising 6.8 points to 3505 and the FTSE AIM All-Share gaining 1.9 points to 744.

Personal care and beauty product group Swallowfield plc (LON:SWL) was the top riser with a 28% lift to 209p on news of an acquisition and placing.

Wishbone Gold (LON:WSBN) was next up with a 23% increase to 0.665p as it agreed a US$3mln two-year loan facility from Sanderson Capital Partners to support its gold trading arm and for general working capital.

Solo Oil PLC (LON:SOLO) spurted 5.6% to 0.28p after updating the market on its Kiliwani North production operations in Tanzania.

But Hardide Plc (LON:HDD) lost falling 24% to 0.62p, as the oil & gas and aerospace engineer reported a hit from lower oil prices and said it was considering potential funding options "as a precautionary measure".

And Mariana Resources Ltd (LON:MARL) which has gold, silver & copper projects in Turkey and South America, slipped 6.1% to 3.52p after chief operating officer Eric Roth sold 2,800,000 shares in the company.

Market preview

The FTSE 100 is set to start the week in positive territory with the prospect of a hike to US interest rates receding.

The index of blue chip stocks will open 32 points higher at 6,241.63, according to London’s spread betting firms.

The direction of American borrowing costs has been a pre-occupation for months now – with the market expecting the Fed to pull the trigger later this month or July at the latest.

Friday’s unexpectedly weak jobs data threw that debate wide open.

“Initial Fed reaction to Friday’s numbers came from Lael Brainard in a speech a few hours after the release of the numbers, where she warned unsurprisingly that given the weakness seen so far in the most recent second-quarter data that a policy of wait and see was probably appropriate,” said Michael Hewson of CMC Markets.

“More importantly will be the tone of Janet Yellen’s speech later today given her and other Fed official’s bullishness about the US labour market and the US economy in general.

“In essence it is going to be enormously difficult for the Fed to steer itself out of the corner it has painted itself into having so deliberately built up market expectations in the manner they have in the past few weeks.” 

In Asia, the picture was mixed. The weaker dollar pushed up the comparative value of the yen, which then hit Japan’s export sector. The Nikkei 225 was down 0.6%.

Stocks indexes in Shanghai and Hong Kong were off 0.1% and 0.3%, while there was natural resources led rally in Australia, which added 0.7%.

*Brent crude is trading 0.7% higher at US$49.98.

*Gold is up 0.3% at US$1.244.10.

*Market rumour: Britain’s biggest holiday park operator Parkdean Resorts is edging closer to a £1bn-plus flotation after reporting a strong increase in bookings this year.

City Headlines

*Sir Martin Sorrell is facing a shareholder rebellion over his £70mln pay package as chief executive of WPP, with a significant minority of investors expected to vote against the advertising group’s remuneration report on Wednesday – Times.

*Sir Philip Green has made no new approach to pensions authorities about restructuring the BHS pension scheme, it has emerged, despite claims he was trying to broker a last-minute deal – Telegraph.

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