LONDON: London’s FTSE 100 rallied on Thursday as the pound plunged following the Bank of England’s decision to defy markets by leaving rates unchanged, while heavyweight energy stocks tracked crude prices higher.
The pound weakened 1.33% after BoE’s decision, boosting the FTSE 100 index and dollar earning companies.
The export-oriented FTSE 100 index, which was flat before the decision, ended 0.5% higher. Oil majors BP and Royal Dutch Shell rose 1.2% and 1.7%, while telecommunications company BT Group added 11.0% after confirming its outlook for this year and the next..
Limiting further advances were banks, down 3.3%, hitting a three-week low following the central bank’s decision.
“There is a realisation that the BoE is nowhere near to a rate hike than what the market initially thought,” said David Madden, an analyst at Equiti Capital. “This is a big win for the US dollar as they win the place to begin at least tightening and more money will be removed from the pound to the dollar.”
The BoE has kept alive the prospect of a tighter monetary policy soon, saying it would probably have to raise Bank Rate from its all-time low of 0.1% “over coming months” if the economy performed as expected.
Supply-chain problems and rising inflationary pressures have led the FTSE 100 to underperform its European and US peers that are trading near record levels after a dovish tapering stance by the European Central Bank and US Federal Reserve on Wednesday.
“Underperformance of commodity-related stocks over the last few years versus tech, and the relative importance of banks in the UK versus US have been the two things weighing FTSE down,” said Edmund Shing, chief investment officer at BNP Paribas Wealth Management. “Now is the time for commodities and banks to finally shine with a more value oriented environment.” The domestically focussed mid-cap index advanced 1.6% to record its best session in over three months, led by positive earnings from engineering firm IMI and electrical retailer Currys.
Britain’s second largest supermarket grocer, Sainsbury’s , fell 2.4% to the bottom of the blue-chip index, as uncertainty around supply chains outweighed a 23% rise in first-half profit.
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