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LONDON MARKET CLOSE: FTSE 100 closes testing week with modest gains

21st Nov 2025 17:06

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 ended in the green on Friday, outperforming European peers, despite a raft of downbeat economic news ahead of next week's budget.

The FTSE 100 index closed up 12.06 points, 0.1%, at 9,539.71.

The FTSE 250 ended 20.98 points lower, 0.1%, at 21,363.37, while the AIM All-Share fell 5.56 points, 0.8%, to 735.64.

For the week, the FTSE 100 was down 1.6%, the FTSE 250 fell 2.1%, and the AIM All-Share declined 1.4%.

The Cboe UK 100 was down 0.1% at 952.14, the Cboe UK 250 was 0.1% lower at 18,473.55, and the Cboe Small Companies slid 2.1% to 17,151.76.

Figures showed a surprise drop in retail sales, higher government borrowing than expected and a slowdown in private sector activity.

The Office for National Statistics said net borrowing amounted to GBP17.43 billion in October, easing from GBP19.89 billion in September, but above an FXStreet cited forecast of GBP15.2 billion.

The figure topped a GBP14.4 billion Office for Budget Responsibility forecast outlined in March.

Meanwhile, the flash composite PMI fell to a two-month low of 50.5 points in November from October's final tally of 52.2.

The flash manufacturing PMI rose to 50.2 points in November from 49.7 in October, a 14-month-high. But the services PMI, fell to a seven-month low of 50.5 from 52.3 in October.

Completing the trio of poor news, retail sales fell 1.1% in October from September, the ONS said. They had been expected to tread water, according to consensus cited by FXStreet. They had risen 0.7% in September.

The data was seen as increasing the likelihood of an interest rate cut by the Bank of England in December, although sterling was little moved.

Pantheon Macroeconomics Chief UK Economist Rob Wood said risks to growth forecasts now "lie to the downside."

"Those downside growth risks along with sharply weaker inflation signals from the PMI cements a December rate cut from the [Monetary Policy Committee]. We think the bar to rate setters holding in December will now be very high," he added.

Wood said a range of surveys give a consistent signal that the past couple of months of "tax hokey-cokey" ahead of the budget is leading households and firms to pause spending and "wait-and-see who gets hit by the smorgasbord of tax hikes."

Sterling was quoted at USD1.3084 at the time of the London equities close on Friday, slightly lower compared to USD1.3091 on Thursday.

The euro stood at USD1.1501, lower against USD1.1534. Against the yen, the dollar was trading higher at JPY156.69, compared to JPY157.46.

In European equities on Friday, the CAC 40 in Paris ended flat, while the DAX40 in Frankfurt declined 0.8%.

In New York, markets were higher at the time of the London equity market close.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.7%, the S&P 500 index was 0.5% higher, and the Nasdaq Composite firmed 0.2%.

The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was at 4.07%, trimmed from 4.10% on Thursday. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury was at 4.71%, narrowed from 4.72%.

Back in London, hopes of lower interest rates gave housebuilders a boost.

In addition, reports suggested next week's budget could include changes to LISAs, aimed at helping first time buyers.

On the FTSE 100, Persimmon rose 4.7%, Barratt Redrow climbed 3.6% and Berkeley gained 2.2%.

Credit checking agency Experian firmed 3.5% as Citi upgraded to 'buy' from 'hold'.

The broker thinks margins at Experian's North American business could surprise on the upside.

Babcock International gained 1.8% as it boosted its interim dividend and backed full-year targets, after trading improved first half.

The London-based aerospace and defence engineering firm posted GBP226.3 million in pretax profit for the six months ended September 30 - a 32% jump from GBP172.0 million the year prior.

Revenue rose 5.4% to GBP2.54 billion from GBP2.41 billion, with Babcock pointing to 7% organic sales growth in the Nuclear division, offset by lower volumes in Land Civil.

Babcock declared a first-half dividend of 2.5 pence per share, up 25% from 2.0p.

Recent falls in US technology stocks weighed on Polar Capital Technology Trust, down 5.3% and Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust, down 3.1% as the initial boost from Nvidia results quickly fizzled out.

"Relief around Nvidia's results didn't last long as investors couldn't shake their fears that the AI boom might have got ahead of itself," said Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell.

"There is a lingering concern that the AI revolution might take longer than expected to truly transform the way companies do business. People in the late 1990s were right to predict the internet would change the world, they just had to wait a bit longer than initially thought, and that resetting of expectations was central to the bursting of the dotcom bubble," he added.

On the FTSE 250, Hammerson rose 7.1% after buying the remaining 50% interest in The Oracle in Reading and raising guidance.

The London-based real estate investment trust expects the deal to be around 5% accretive to its financial 2026 EPRA earnings.

Hammerson raised its financial 2025 total gross rental income growth guidance to 19%, from the 17% previously guided.

Inchcape advanced 3.0% as Bank of America started coverage with a 'buy' rating.

BofA sees scope for GBP1 billion of share buybacks across 2026 to 2030 and total returns, including dividends, equating to 58% of the current market capitalisation.

But Ithaca Energy plunged 13% as Goldman Sachs downgraded to 'sell'.

Brent oil was quoted lower at USD62.15 a barrel at the time of the London equities close on Friday, from USD63.44 late Thursday.

Gold traded higher at USD4,073.57 an ounce on Friday against USD4,058.47 on Thursday.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Persimmon, up 57.00 pence at 1,258.50p, Diageo, up 64.00p at 1,768.00p, Barratt Redrow, up 13.30p at 378.80p, Experian, up 114.00p at 3,353.00p and London Stock Exchange, up 272.00p at 8,602.00p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Melrose Industries, down 37.00p at 570.00p, JD Sports Fashion, down 4.40p at 72.88p, Polar Capital Technology Trust, down 24.00p at 433.00p, Glencore, down 14.05p at 335.00p, and Rolls Royce, down 41.00p at 1,038.00p.

Monday's global economic calendar has Ifo business climate report in Germany and the Dallas Fed manufacturing index in the US.

Financial markets are closed in Japan for Labor Day.

Next week's UK corporate calendar has full year results from contract catering company Compass and budget airline easyJet.

By Jeremy Cutler, Alliance News reporter

Comments and questions to [email protected]

Copyright 2025 Alliance News Ltd. All Rights Reserved.


Related Shares:

PersimmonBarratt RedrowBerkeley GroupExperianBabcockHammersonIthaca EnergyPolar Capital Technology TrustScottish MortgageInchcapeDiageoMelroseGlencoreJD SportsRolls-RoyceLondon Stock Exchange
FTSE 100 Latest
Value9,539.71
Change12.06