MyFinances.co.uk
News feeds Free newsletter

All the latest personal finance news - helping you make the most of your money

Savings & Investments

Poor economic news drops FTSE 100

Tuesday, 15 Jul 2008 10:39
FTSE 100 in a daze as economic storm brews

Recommended ... 

The FTSE 100 fell 1.22 per cent this morning amid a barrage of poor economic data.

At 10:00 BST the index was at 5,235.90 – down 65.30 points – the lowest since July 2005.

Poor high street sales data coupled with a record fall in property transactions and a rise in inflation to put traders in a dour mood.

Thomson Reuters was down 5.06 per cent, Royal Bank of Scotland fell 4.89 per cent, and London Stock Exchange Group dropped 4.82 per cent.

Standard Chartered slipped 3.92 per cent and ICAP dropped 3.56 per cent.

The top five risers were Compass Group (up 2.2 per cent), British energy (up 2.12 per cent), Cairn Energy (up 1.93 per cent), Scottish & Southern Energy (up 1.43 per cent) and Marks & Spencer (up 1.08 per cent).

London falls followed falls last night in New York – with the Dow Jones down 0.41 per cent and the Nasdaq dropping 1.17 per cent.

On the currency markets the dollar fell against most currencies – down 0.80 per cent to €0.62385, down 1.13 per cent to 104.985 yen, and down 0.86 per cent to £0.49705.

Sterling rose from the inflation figures making £1 now worth €1.2555, $2.01167 and 211.25 yen.




Recommended ... 

    • Get a great investment quote

      Fill in one simple form and we will put you in touch with an investments advisor who will compare investment opportunities and provide you with a free no obligation investment quote.

Comment on this story... 

Name 

Town/Country 

Your email 

Your comment 

Enter the text shown to the right
By submitting this form you agree to our website terms of use and our privacy policy.

Disclaimer:
myfinances.co.uk is not authorised to give advice under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000.

Terms:
By using this site, you are deemed to have accepted our terms of use.

myfinances poll 

myfinances.co.uk is running a poll to get your reaction to the interest rate cut.
Let us know what you think.

Free stuff 

Sign up for our free daily newsletter and other free stuff.