Search
EN Down
Language
Hi, user_no_name
Live Chat

FTSE 100

UK stocks start week lower on rising yields, China worries 

 

The FTSE 100 index (UK100) saw a 0.78% decline on Monday, closing at 7,623.99. It had earlier hit an intra-day low of 7,580.81. 

This decline extended slight losses observed in the previous week, primarily due to emerging concerns regarding the economic situation in China and the continued hawkish leanings from major central banks, such as the Bank of England, U.S. Federal Reserve and European Central Bank, which have indicated a higher-for-longer interest rate scenario is likely on the cards for the foreseeable future. 

Sticky inflation and low growth is pushing bond yields higher and equity markets lower, impacting blue-chip indices such as London’s blue-chip FTSE 100. The yield on 10-year U.S. Treasuries has crossed 4.5%, a level not seen since October 2007, while the coupon on 10-year German bunds has risen above 2.8% — its highest level since 2011. 

Companies with significant exposure to the Chinese economy and fluctuations in U.S. borrowing costs ---— particularly industrial mining firms —were the most affected in yesterday’s trading. 

Rio Tinto (RIO) and Antofagasta saw a 2% drop, while Anglo-American (AGLJ) and Fresnillo (FRES) booked a declines of over 1%.  Luxury brand Burberry saw a 4.5% decrease in its stock value, and Prudential, which has a strong presence in Hong Kong, fell by 2.7%. 

Shares in gambling company Entain's stock plummeted by 13% following a downgrade in its sales forecasts, as it warned of slower growth in online gaming revenue stemming Italy and Australia, along with regulatory headwinds in the UK. 

 

Choose your points of movement

Сalculate your hypothetical P/L (aggregated cost and charges) if you had opened a trade today.

Market

Shares Search
Shares
Index
Commodity
Bonds
Crypto
ETFs
Currency

Instrument

Search
Clear input
Occidental
Prosus N.V.
Porsche AG
Hermes
CAT
Thermo Fisher
Nikola Corporation
Tilray
Shell plc (LSE)
Skillz Inc
Iberdrola
DeltaAir
CrowdStrike Holdings
Golar LNG
Applied Materials
Snowflake
Royal Bank Canada
Amazon.com
Spotify
Exxon Mobil
CCB (Asia)
McDonald's
Campari
GameStop
Netflix
ON Semiconductor
Costco
Dave & Buster's
Delivery Hero SE
LUCID
Continental
SunPower
Zoom Video Communications
Schlumberger
Virgin Galactic
Upwork Inc.
Cameco
JP Morgan
Fuelcell
Rivian Automotive
XPeng Inc
Wal-Mart Stores
Trade Desk
Blackstone
Vodafone
Aptiv PLC
L'Oreal
Target
Rio Tinto
Sartorius AG
British American Tobacco
Qorvo
ASOS
Cisco Systems
Nel ASA
Arista
Airbus
Apple
Pfizer
AMC Entertainment Holdings
ASML
Hubspot
Teladoc
Starbucks
SMCI
Canopy Growth
Wish.com Inc
Lockheed Martin
ProSiebenSat.1
IAG
AbbVie
Marston's
Baidu
Teleperformance
Norwegian Air Shuttle
Airbus Group SE
HSBC HK
Block
Annaly Capital
Abbott
LVMH
American Express
Novavax
GoPro
Siemens
Total
SIG
Pinterest Inc
Taiwan Semi
Etsy
Amgen
SONY
3D Systems
UPS
Yandex
BlackBerry
Gen Digital Inc
Xiaomi
Quanta Services
Unity Software
NVIDIA
Anglo American
Palantir Technologies Inc
Fresnillo
Deere
Rolls-Royce
Porsche
Uber
Vir Biotechnology
American Airlines
ROBLOX Corp
Macy's
FirstRand
easyJet
DISNEY
Aurora Cannabis Inc
BP
Adidas
Boeing Co
Vonovia
Coca-Cola Co (NYSE)
Home Depot
General Electric
Coinbase Inc
ALIBABA HK
Philip Morris
General Motors
PayPal
UniCredit
II-VI
BASF
Kraft Heinz
Alphabet (Google)
Palo Alto Networks
Evraz
Plug Power
Li Auto
Oracle
Roku Inc
UiPath Inc
Upstart Holdings Inc
F5 Networks
Infinera
Inditex
ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd
Deutsche Bank
Hammerson
IBM
JD.com
Barrick Gold
TUI AG (LSE)
Lemonade
MerckCo USA
Infosys
Invesco Mortgage
Comcast
Santander
Accenture
Anheuser-Busch Inbev
Visa
Mastercard
Ozon
T-Mobile
SAP
Wayfair
Beyond Meat
Kuaishou
CarMax
Tesla
Lyft
Medtronic
Adobe
Morgan Stanley
Workday Inc
Blackrock
Vipshop
Meta (Formerly Facebook)
Linde PLC
Micron
Lululemon
Ceconomy
Chipotle
Gilead
Avacta
Naspers
Bristol Myers
Samsung
The Cheesecake Factory
Glencore plc
British American Tobacco
ChargePoint Holdings Inc
Twilio
Intel
Lloyds
CNOOC
Electrolux
Wells Fargo
Sea
PG&E
Fedex
Citigroup
Peloton Interactive Inc.
eBay
Microsoft
JnJ
Bilibili Inc
Trump Media & Technology Group
AIA
Nasdaq
Air France-KLM
Allianz
Lithium Americas Corp
Procter & Gamble
Qualcomm
AMD
New Oriental
MercadoLibre.com
Mondelez
Lumentum Holdings
Two Harbors Investment aration
AstraZeneca
Norwegian Cruise Line
Unilever
GoHealth
PepsiCo
Barclays
PETROCHINA
Goldman Sachs
Eli Lilly
HSBC
Cellnex
Berkshire Hathaway
Jumia Technologies
HDFC Bank
RTX Corp
Bayer
Bank of America
Chevron
ADT
DoorDash
Marriott
Nike
AT&T
GSX Techedu
Robinhood
Telecom Italia
Deliveroo Holdings
TUI
Freeport McMoRan
Toyota
BioNTech
Airbnb Inc
Alibaba
Verizon
Nio
Eni
Ford
Hanesbrands
Volkswagen
UnitedHealth
Shopify
China Life
Snap
Christian Dior
Conoco Phillips
Lufthansa
Tencent
Moderna Inc
Salesforce.com
Broadcom
Diageo
Toro
Cinemark

Account Type

Direction

Quantity

Amount must be equal or higher than

Amount should be less than

Amount should be a multiple of the minimum lots increment

USD Down
$-

Value

$-

Commission

$-

Spread

-

Leverage

-

Conversion Fee

$-

Required Margin

$-

Overnight Swaps

$-
Start Trading

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results.

All positions on instruments denominated in a currency that is different from your account currency, will be subject to a conversion fee at the position exit as well.

FTSE 100 companies: Index constituents and selection  

 

The Financial Times-Stock Exchange 100 Share Index, commonly known as the FTSE 100, or more informally, the “Footsie” is an index that monitors the performance of the 100 largest publicly traded companies based on their market capitalization and listed on the London Stock Exchange (LSE). The name "FTSE" is an acronym derived from the Financial Times and the LSE, its original parent organizations.  

Today, ownership and maintenance of the FTSE 100 index rest with the London Stock Exchange Group. It holds a comparable significance in London's financial landscape as the U.S. Dow Jones Industrial Average (USA30) and S&P 500 (US500) do in the United States. The FTSE 100 serves as the primary gauge of the broader U.K. stock market's performance.  

The FTSE 100's level is calculated by using the total market capitalization of its constituent companies and the index value. The total market capitalization is subject to change throughout the trading day, as individual share prices of the indexed companies fluctuate, consequently affecting the index value.  

When the FTSE 100 is reported as moving up or down, it is compared to the previous day's closing market value. This calculation takes place continuously during each trading day, commencing at 8:00 a.m. at the market opening and concluding at the LSE's 4:30 p.m. closing time. A decline in the FTSE 100 indicates a decrease in the combined value of the largest companies listed in the United Kingdom, whereas a new high suggests that the overall worth of these indexed companies has increased.  

Inclusion in the FTSE 100 is contingent on a company’s listing on the LSE rather than its country of registration — a country doesn’t have to be based in the UK to be considered as a potential index constituent. Many of the listed firms are international in scope, conducting a significant portion of their business overseas, which means the exchange rate of the British pound plays a role in their valuation. A weaker pound may increase the value of a dollar-based company when translated into pounds, while a stronger pound can reduce the earnings of companies primarily operating in Europe or other countries.  

To make sure the FTSE 100's composition stays relevant, a quarterly review is conducted to ensure it includes the companies with the highest market capitalization.  

As of September 26, 2023, the top 10 largest companies by market capitalization included in the FTSE 100 are as follows:  

  • Astrazeneca (AZN)  
  • Shell (SHEL
  • HSBC (HSBA)  
  • Unilever (ULVR)  
  • BP (BP)  
  • Diageo (DGE)  
  • Rio Tinto (RIO)  
  • GSK  
  • British American Tobacco (BATS)  
  • Glencore (GLN)  

When considering indices or shares for trading and price predictions, remember that trading CFDs involves a significant degree of risk and could result in capital loss.   

Past performance is not indicative of any future results. This information is provided for informative purposes only and should not be construed to be investment advice. 

Latest news

Nvidia earnings report comes amid resurgence in meme stocks

Thursday, 16 May 2024

Indices

Week ahead: Nvidia earnings come amid return of meme stock mania

Dow Jones index touches 40,000 but indices dip

Thursday, 16 May 2024

Indices

Dow Jones index touches 40,000 but stocks ease back

Sterling eyes weekly gains ahead of UK inflation data

Thursday, 16 May 2024

Indices

Sterling poised for weekly gain ahead of UK inflation data

Leading stock market indices scored new record closes after April’s US CPI report

Wednesday, 15 May 2024

Indices

Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq hit new highs after US CPI report

Live Chat