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FTSE 100 Declines as Iran War Confusion Dents Risk Appetite

  • FTSE 100 down 0.1%, FTSE 250 ​down 0.4%
  • Both indexes hit multi-month lows amid Mideast tensions
  • Energy stocks rise ‌as oil prices rebound above $100 per barrel
  • Markets price in two quarter‑point BoE rate hikes

March 24 (Reuters) - The FTSE 100 ticked lower in choppy trading on Tuesday, as mixed signals from the Middle ​East conflict lifted oil prices and curbed risk appetite, while investors ​also priced in further rate‑hike expectations.

The blue‑chip FTSE 100, which had ⁠traded higher earlier in the session, was down 0.1% at a three‑month low, ​as of 1039 GMT.

The mid‑cap FTSE 250 fell 0.4% to a near 10‑month ​low as mid-caps, which are more vulnerable to domestic pressures, were hit by rising energy costs.

The benchmarks' fall tracked global stocks, where the relief rally from U.S. President Donald ​Trump the bombing of Iran's power grid fizzled out, leaving investors with no ​clarity over the fate of the war.

UK energy stocks rose 0.8%, mirroring oil prices, ‌which ⁠rebounded to above $100 a barrel following Iran's statement rejecting Trump's claim of "productive" talks with Tehran.

Markets are now pricing in two quarter‑point Bank of England rate hikes this year, with a possibility of a third, down from four expected before Trump’s comments on ​Monday.

Miners and banks ​fell 0.4% and ⁠0.9%, respectively, were among the biggest drags on the day.

Among individual stocks, Bellway fell 10% after the home builder trimmed its ​profit margin outlook and echoed warnings on risks to ​the housing ⁠market from the Middle East conflict.

S4 Capital surged 26% after the advertising group said it expects its 2026 net revenues to meet analyst expectations despite flagging a hit in ⁠the ​first quarter from clients spending less due to ​the conflict.

YouGov fell 8% after the market research firm warned of lower annual profit due to additional ​investments in its Shopper division.

Reporting by Tharuniyaa Lakshmi in Bengaluru; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair

Source: Reuters


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