LONDON: London's FTSE 100 fell on Tuesday after data showing Britain's economy shrank by the most since 1979 in the first three months of the year took the shine off one of the strongest quarters for UK stocks since the global financial crisis.
The blue-chip FTSE 100 closed 0.9% lower, weighed down by a 4% decline in Royal Dutch Shell Plc after it said it planned to write down the value of its assets by up to $22 billion on a lower outlook for oil and gas prices.
Gross domestic product dropped by a quarterly 2.2% between January and March, while Prime Minister Boris Johnson in a speech on Tuesday, promised to fast-track 5 billion pounds ($6.15 billion) of infrastructure investment to steer the economy out of the downturn.
The mid-cap FTSE 250 eased 0.5%, with energy firms leading declines.
The FTSE 100 ended the quarter 8.8% higher, its biggest such gain since 2010, as a raft of global stimulus and a pickup in business activity after the easing of coronavirus-driven lockdowns bolstered optimism about a post-pandemic economic recovery.
However, there were still concerns as the city of Leicester went back into lockdown following a local flare-up of the virus. Homebuilder Redrow slipped 6.8% after saying it expected its turnover to drop more than a third this year.
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