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FTSE 100 Gains as Data Shows Softer US-Iran War Inflation

June 5 (Reuters) - UK's FTSE 100 rose on Friday, bucking a ​risk-off mood in other global markets, as investors took comfort from data ‌suggesting that inflationary pressures from the Middle East war may be less severe than feared.

The blue-chip FTSE 100 index rose 0.45% as of 12:48 pm GMT, while the midcap FTSE 250 was flat.

  • British ​businesses expect to increase prices less quickly in the year ahead than they ​did in April as some of the initial energy price shock caused ⁠by the Iran war fades, according to a survey published by the Bank ​of England.

  • The survey of more than 2,000 British companies showed 57% of firms expected to ​increase their prices in response to the energy price shock, down 7 percentage points from April.

  • "The latest evidence appears to support our view that the weakness of the labour market will prevent the ​second-round inflation effects that the Bank of England fears," said Paul Dales, chief ​UK economist at Capital Economics.

  • "If so, the Bank of England might stand out from the central bank ‌crowd ⁠by not raising interest rates."

  • Still, an early resolution to the conflict and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, a critical shipping route for global oil shipments, would be essential to prevent further escalation of the economic impact.

  • Iran reaffirmed support for its Lebanese ally ​Hezbollah and demanded ​Israel withdraw from southern ⁠Lebanon, underscoring complications facing an interim deal to end the broader conflict between Washington and Tehran.

  • Traders expect the BoE to keep ​borrowing costs unchanged at 3.75% this month, but see one or ​possibly two ⁠quarter-point hikes in rates later this year.

  • Investors are also contending with political uncertainty in the UK.

  • Earlier this week, Labour mayor Andy Burnham signalled he would run in any leadership race ⁠against Prime ​Minister Keir Starmer, if he won a local ​election later this month.

  • Tech shares jumped 2.1% on Friday, while personal care stocks gained 1.7%. Precious metal miners, ​on the other hand, fell 2.2%.

Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Shailesh Kuber

Source: Reuters


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