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British stocks drop as inflation increases; Glencore's earnings are hit

The benchmark index for Britain fell on Wednesday, after inflation in the country rose higher than expected. Glencore shares also dropped after the company reported lower earnings for 2024.

At 1034 GMT the blue-chip FTSE 100 fell by 0.3%, while midcap FTSE 250 dropped 0.4% and hit a two-week-low.

In January, Britain's inflation rate accelerated to its highest level in 10 months at 3.0%. This exceeded expectations and tested the Bank of England’s confidence that the price pressures would ease on a longer-term basis.

The BoE cut its benchmark rate from 4.75% to 4.5% earlier this month and stated that inflation is likely to reach 3.7% this year, nearly double its 2% goal.

The UK housebuilders' index fell 1.6%. Homebuilders like Persimmon and Taylor Wimpey, as well as Barratt Redrow, saw their shares fall between 1.6% to 2.4%.

Mortgage payments are higher when interest rates rise, which results in a lower demand for new houses.

Nick Saunders is the chief executive officer of Webull UK. He said: "It's like we are balancing on a knife edge. It's only going to take one or two bad sets of data for any optimism to become pessimism in the markets."

Glencore shares fell 6.9% following the announcement that lower commodity prices had impacted its earnings in 2013. This was despite the fact that $2.2 billion of share buybacks were returned to shareholders.

The industrial metal mining index fell 2.6% on the day, becoming the biggest sectoral loser.

Trainline's stock fell 9%, to a low of about five months after J.P. Morgan lowered the stock from "overweight" to "neutral".

Jet2 fell 10.6% after the company warned about profit margin pressure caused by high inflation, increasing costs and decreasing consumer holiday spending.

Easyjet and Wizz Air, two of its peers, were each down more than 4%. The UK's Travel-Linked Index fell by 1.9%.

The yield on Britain's 10-year bonds rose to its highest level in three weeks, at 4.6%. This added pressure to the stock market.

Utilities (often traded as bond substitutes) added 0.8%.

The energy index also rose 0.7%, tracking the rise in crude oil prices. (Reporting by Ragini Mathur in Bengaluru; Editing by Shreya Biswas)

(source: Reuters)