London Markets: FTSE 100 faces selling pressure as COVID pandemic worries weigh

The main London index was under pressure Thursday, following a selloff on Wall Street, with pandemic worries chiefly weighing on global mining stocks.

The FTSE 100 index
UKX,
-0.41%

was trading 0.6% lower to 7,130, in a volatile week that has seen the index rose 1.2%. The pound
GBPUSD,
+0.30%

rose 0.3% to $1.3311. A stronger pound may also be weighing the blue-chip index, as it can be negative for companies that earn dollars overseas.

While Wall Street stocks were moving higher on Thursday, a wild session of trading saw sharp losses on Wednesday, following news of the first U.S. omicron COVID case.

“The World Health Organization said it expected to have more information on the Omicron variant within days, but up until we get an official and justified answer, market participants are likely to stay reluctant to massively add risk to their portfolios,” said Charalambos Pissouros, head of research at JFD Group, in a note to clients.

Just a handful of companies were in the black, including consumer goods group Unilever
UL,
+2.31%

ULVR,
+0.99%

up 1.1%, which was the best gain for any stock. International Consolidated Airlines
IAG,
+1.73%

rose 0.9%.

Mining stocks led the way south with Glencore
GLEN,
-4.65%

down 4%, Antofagasta down 2.8% and Anglo American
AAL,
-0.56%

down 1%. Oil stocks were among the few gainers, with Royal Dutch Shell
RDSA,
+1.59%

RDS.A,
+4.77%

up 1% and BP
BP,
+1.22%

BP,
+4.37%

up 0.5%. Oil prices were drifting lower, OPEC+ agreed to rollover its existing policy and lift output by 400,000 barrels per day in January.

This post was originally published on Market Watch

Financial News

Daily News on Investing, Personal Finance, Markets, and more!