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FTSE 100 Falls as Oil Rises, US-Iran Talk Hopes Fade Away

April 23 (Reuters) - Britain's FTSE 100 fell ​on Thursday, as higher oil prices and fading prospects of renewed ‌U.S.-Iran peace negotiations weighed on the broader market, while investors parsed through a raft of corporate earnings.

The blue-chip FTSE 100 index dropped 0.8% to 10,388.84 points by 10:40 ​a.m. GMT, while the midcap FTSE 250 fell 1.1%.

  • Brent crude futures surged past $100 ​a barrel, as Iran tightened its grip on the Strait of ⁠Hormuz and said it will not reopen the waterway until the U.S. lifts ​its naval blockade.

  • The rise in oil prices pressured travel & leisure stocks, with Wizz ​Air and Carnival down 3% and 2.4%, respectively.

  • Travel retailer WH Smith plunged 10.6% after it cut its annual profit forecast and suspended dividend.

  • Meanwhile, heavyweight banks Barclays and HSBC fell 2.1% ​and 0.9%, respectively.

  • Among miners, Fresnillo declined 6.9%, and Rio Tinto fell 2.1%, tracking precious and ​base metals.

  • The share of British firms reporting higher costs jumped to a record this month, signalling ‌high input ⁠costs and rising inflation as fallout from the Iran war weighs on the economy, a survey showed.

  • Traders are now pricing in 70% probability of the Bank of England hiking rates in June, up from 40% last week, according ​to LSEG data.

  • The ​FTSE 100 is ⁠down 2.7% for the week so far and is on track to erase nearly all gains sparked by hopes of the ​U.S.–Iran ceasefire, which was announced earlier this month.

  • Among other stocks, supermarket group ​Sainsbury ⁠fell 5.2% after it warned that the Iran war could cloud its outlook, mirroring concerns raised by peer Tesco earlier in the week. Tesco shares fell 3% on ⁠Thursday.

  • The London Stock ​Exchange Group gained 1.9% after forecasting annual ​revenue growth at the upper end of its range.

  • Software firm Relx was down 1.3% after the ​company reaffirmed its full-year outlook.

Reporting by Utkarsh Tushar Hathi; Editing by Diti Pujara

Source: Reuters


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