World markets report

Nov 20, 2009

Share with
friends:

Comments (0) Print this article

Just a handful of stocks managed any gains yesterday as the FTSE 100 slipped back 1.4% to close at 5,267, its biggest one-day fall for three weeks.

Miners were at the sharp end, with Antofagasta and Xstrata the biggest losers of the day, down 5.3% and 5% respectively; the rest of the sector wasn't far behind. Energy stocks slipped too, with Royal Dutch Shell down 1.7% and BP 1.2% lower. And among banks, Lloyds was the only riser, managing a rise of 0.4%.

Heading the few climbers was brewer SAB Miller, which added 3.4% after reporting better than expected first half results. Other stocks in positive territory included household goods group Reckitt Benckiser, up 1.1%, National Grid, Resolution, Tesco and Centrica.

Europe

In Europe, the Paris CAC fell 68 points to 3,760; and the German Xetra Dax was 85 points lower at 5,702.

US

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.9% to 10,332; the S&P 500 lost 1.3% to 1,094; and the Nasdaq Composite was 1.7% lower at 2,156.

Asia

In Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 0.5% to 9,497; while the broader Topix index gained 0.1% to 838. In China, the Shanghai Composite fell 0.4% to 3,308; and the CSI 300 lost 0.3% to 3,631.

Commodities

Brent spot was trading at $77.10 early today, and in New York, crude oil was at $77.70. Spot gold was trading at $1,146 an ounce; silver was at $18.48 and platinum was at $1,437.

Currencies

In the forex markets this morning, sterling was trading against the US dollar at 1.6604 and against the euro at 1.1137. The dollar was trading at 0.6711 against the euro and 88.87 against the Japanese yen.

UK news

And today, Britain's biggest building society, the Nationwide, reported a 63% fall in profits. In the six months to 30 September profits fell to £143m, down from £374m a year ago. The society also sounded a bearish note for house prices over the next year, saying: "The growth in house prices over recent months appears to be driven by lack of supply, and growth in unemployment throughout 2010 will inevitably exert downward pressure on house prices."

Comments (0)

Share with
friends:

Leave a comment

This will be the name displayed with your comment.

This helps us verify comments are genuine. It will not be displayed anywhere on the site and is stored confidentially.

Please keep your comment within 1,000 characters and relevant to the main topic. We encourage healthy debate, but we don't allow insults or bad language. Anything off topic or unpleasant, we'll remove. Enjoy the conversation! Thank you.

captcha To prevent spam-related comments please enter the characters shown in the 'Captcha' box to the left.

By leaving a comment you accept our terms and conditions.


FREE - MoneyWeek's daily investment emailJohn Stepek

Our free daily email, Money Morning, is an informative and enjoyable analysis of what's going on in the markets. Written by our Editor, John Stepek, and guest contributors.
Sign up FREE to Money Morning here.

>