Become a Member
  • Track your favourite stocks
  • Create & monitor portfolios
  • Daily portfolio value
Sign Up
Quickpicks
Add shares to your
quickpicks to
display them here!

LONDON MARKET OPEN: Stocks mostly red after "hawkish" US Fed move

11th Dec 2025 09:04

(Alliance News) - Stock prices in London opened mixed on Thursday, ahead of comments by the Bank of England's governor and following the US Federal Reserve's latest cut.

"The FOMC delivered a hawkish 25bp cut yesterday, with Chair Powell setting a marginally higher bar for further cuts in the near-term," commented Pepperstone's Michael Brown. "Today, the SNB are set to stand pat, with US jobless claims the data highlight."

The FTSE 100 index opened down 12.54 points, 0.1%, at 9,642.99, and the FTSE 250 was down 20.64 points, 0.1%, at 21,810.33, but the AIM All-Share was up 2.14 points, 0.3%, at 748.76.

The Cboe UK 100 was marginally down at 967.82, the Cboe UK 250 was marginally down at 1,8961.18, and the Cboe Small Companies was down 0.6% at 17,415.85.

On the FTSE 250, FirstGroup was up 1.9% after announcing the acquisition of the UK sightseeing operations of RATP Developpement for about GBP17 million.

Chief Executive Officer Graham Sutherland says: "The acquisition of the bus operations in London and Bath...will allow us to further diversify and expand our footprint in two of our key markets.

"The integration of the businesses will also create material operational and cost synergies and the opportunity to grow our London route portfolio over time."

Clean energy technology developer Ceres Power lost 4.3% after a highly critical report from Grizzly Research.

Grizzly, which previously accused Trustpilot of "mafia-style extortion campaigns against non-paying businesses", said Ceres "fuels investors' illusions with misleading promises".

"We believe [Ceres] is hiding a flawed business model with abysmally small revenue potential behind a facade of big-name announcements and lofty projections," the short-seller said.

On AIM, Tristel rose 0.7% after reporting a strong start to its new financial year.

The maker of infection prevention products said it is trading in line with expectations, and remains firmly on target to deliver at least 10% annual revenue growth.

Meanwhile in the UK, the housing market continued to weaken in November as agreed sales and buyer enquiries declined, data published by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors showed Thursday.

New buyer enquiries across the UK in November had a net balance of minus 32%, falling further from minus 24% in October and marking the weakest reading since late 2023.

For agreed sales, November's net balance of minus 23% is up a notch from minus 24% in October, still showing a continued downward pattern in sales activity.

In London, the net balance fell to minus 44%, now more negative than any other part of the UK, with RICS citing the introduction of the high valuation council tax surcharge.

It was announced in the UK government budget, is set to take effect in April 2028 and affects owners of residential property in England worth GBP2 million or more in 2026. Depending on the value of property, it is an extra recurring annual charge of between GBP2,500 and GBP7,500.

In European equities on Thursday, the CAC 40 in Paris was up 0.1%, while the DAX 40 in Frankfurt was down 0.4%.

Meanwhile in Switzerland, the Swiss National Bank kept the interest rate at 0.00%, in line with FXStreet-cited market expectations.

The bank added that it expects annual inflation in Switzerland to have averaged 0.2% for 2025, with slight acceleration to 0.3% expected in 2026 and a further uptick to 0.6% for 2027.

The pound was quoted higher at USD1.3369 early on Thursday in London, compared to USD1.3332 at the equities close on Wednesday. The euro stood higher at USD1.1697, against USD1.1647. Against the yen, the dollar was trading at JPY155.96, higher compared to JPY156.36.

In Asia on Thursday, the Nikkei 225 index in Tokyo was down 0.9%. In China, the Shanghai Composite was down 0.7%, while the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong was down 0.1%. The S&P/ASX 200 in Sydney closed up 0.2%.

In the US on Wednesday, Wall Street ended higher, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 1.1%, the S&P 500 up 0.7% and the Nasdaq Composite up 0.3%.

The yield on the US 10-year Treasury was quoted at 4.14%, narrowing from 4.18%. The yield on the US 30-year Treasury was quoted unchanged at 4.78%.

Brent oil was quoted higher at USD61.56 a barrel early in London on Thursday from USD61.42 late Wednesday.

Gold was quoted higher at USD4,215.60 an ounce against USD4,200.39.

Still to come on Thursday's economic calendar, as well as jobless claims the US has EIA natural gas stocks.

UK Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey speaks at 0950 UK time.

By Emma Curzon, Alliance News reporter

Comments and questions to [email protected]

Copyright 2025 Alliance News Ltd. All Rights Reserved.


Related Shares:

FirstgroupCeres PowerTristel
FTSE 100 Latest
Value9,703.16
Change47.63