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Consumer staples and industrial stocks drag down the FTSE 100

London's FTSE 100 dipped on Monday as industrials and consumer staples stocks weighed. Investors awaited this week's much-anticipated budget from the British government.

The blue-chip index ended down by 0.1% while the midcap FTSE 250 gained 0.2%. This was its first positive movement in over two years.

As peace talks to end Ukraine's war progressed, stocks of aerospace and defence fell by 1.7%. BAE Systems dropped 3.6% and Babcock International fell 1.6%.

Diageo fell 2.2%. Beverage stocks dropped 1.8%. Sub-indexes for personal care, drugs and groceries fell by 1.2%. Marks & Spencer dropped 2.6%. Utilities lost 1.3%.

Banking stocks, on the other hand, rose by 1%. Morgan Stanley analysts predicted that net interest income for European banks would grow by 4% in the next year.

Standard Chartered grew 2.9% following the analyst's upgrade to "overweight". Barclays gained 2.1% after Morgan Stanley named the bank a top pick.

Gold prices rose on higher Fed rate-cut bettings, resulting in a 5.9% increase for precious metal miners. Fresnillo soared by 9.1% while Endeavour Mining grew by 4%. Goldman Sachs began to cover homebuilders with a positive outlook. Vistry rose by 3.8%.

EasyJet, a travel and leisure stock, rose 3.6%.

Mid-cap index is down around 5% since its peak in October, amid global market weakness. Budget uncertainty has also contributed to the decline.

Rachel Reeves, the Finance Minister, is planning to increase taxes by tens or hundreds of billions for the second consecutive time since her election in 2024 to meet her borrowing target. She hopes to avoid a sell-off on the bond market while increasing welfare spending.

She will not break her election promise of raising the income tax. Instead, she will increase a variety of other taxes.

Global stocks also rose after comments made by a U.S. Federal Reserve representative last week raised expectations of a rate cut in December. Gains followed a sharp drop in equity markets due to concerns about the high valuations of AI stocks. Anglo American rose 0.9% as global miner BHP dropped a last ditch attempt to acquire its rival. (Reporting and editing by Tasimzahid and Alex Richardson in Bengaluru, with Utkarsh Tushr Hathi from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)