FTSE 100 falls 1% on opening
FTSE 100 falls 1% on opening
Friday 19th December 2008
The FTSE 100 started the day with a one per cent fall marking a pattern seen through much of the week of early losses made up during the day.At 8:47 GMT, the index stood at 4,287.01, a fall of 43.65 points or 1.01 per cent.
After losses last night, Old Mutual swung back and was up 5.67 per cent this morning, while Schroders was up 3.20 per cent.
Royal&SunAlliance was up 2.65 per cent and cruise operator Carnival rose 1.50 per cent.
Leading the morning falls was Schroders non-voting stock down 5.03 per cent.
Platinum producer Johnson Matthey saw a 4.61 per cent drop, while miners Angle American and Antofagasta fell 4.59 per cent and 4.04 per cent respectively.
Cairn Energy was down 4.32 per cent.
On the currency markets, sterling was up a notch against the dollar and euro.
£1 now stands at $1.50415 and 1.06815, making 1 worth £0.93850.
Last night in New York the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 2.49 per cent, while the Hang Seng fell 2.39 per cent.
The Nikkei dropped 0.91 per cent despite the Bank of Japan cutting interest rates to 0.1 per cent.
This morning in Europe, the Cac 40 in Paris was down 1.43 per cent and the Dax in Frankfurt fell 0.70 per cent.

Related News
Public faith in the economy falls, but confidence up - 19/12/08
Public confidence in the state of the UK economy fell further this month
Public confidence in the state of the UK economy fell further this month
FTSE 100 firm as banks drop - 18/12/08
After a stable day, the FTSE 100 made up late losses to close down 0
After a stable day, the FTSE 100 made up late losses to close down 0
75,000 repossessions in 2009 forecast - 18/12/08
The number of homeowners falling behind on their mortgage will increase by 138 per cent in the coming year
The number of homeowners falling behind on their mortgage will increase by 138 per cent in the coming year
Bean: 0% interest rates are a possibility - 18/12/08
Interest rates in the UK could follow the US and Japan and head down to zero per cent, a leading member of the Bank of England's monetary policy committee (MPC) stated today
Interest rates in the UK could follow the US and Japan and head down to zero per cent, a leading member of the Bank of England's monetary policy committee (MPC) stated today
Oil production cut to push up prices - 17/12/08
Oil producers today responded to the falling oil price by slashing production
Oil producers today responded to the falling oil price by slashing production
News Article Search
Quick Apply
News Archive


