Britain’s top share index dropped back on Wednesday as below-par U.S. economic pointers and weak UK manufacturing and housing data intensified investor concerns about the strength of the global economy.
At the close, the FTSE 100 index was down 61.38 points, or 1.0 percent, at 5,928.61, reversing sharply in the afternoon after briefly pushing back close to the psychologically important 6,000 level in the morning session.
Energy and banking stocks suffered the biggest falls as risk appetite evaporated, with Lloyds Banking Group down 3.8 percent and BG Group off 3.1 percent.
The markets finally ended their winning streak as data this afternoon suggested that the U.S. recovery was slowing, and with non-farm payrolls numbers on Friday there will be little reason for that to change before then, said Mic Mills, head of electronic trading at ETX Capital.
As a precursor to the U.S. jobs report, a survey by ADP Employer Services on Wednesday showed U.S. private employers added a scant 38,000 jobs in May, far below expectations and the lowest level since September 2010.
May’s U.S. ISM report showed a sharp slowdown in manufacturing activity, adding to fears the recovery is faltering after poor consumer confidence data on Tuesday. Weak domestic data also weighed in London, with British PMI manufacturing activity at a 20-month low in May, while mortgage approvals were also lower than expected in April.
UK blue chips dropped back in tandem with sharp falls by their U.S. peers, down 1.2 percent by London’s close.
Baring Asset Management expressed concern that valuations for global equity markets offer little leeway for the potential earnings disappointments that could accompany the slowing of the global economic recovery.
After two years of strong growth, recent data suggests that most economic indicators are now peaking out in the West from the troughs of early 2009 … Against this backdrop, the short-term outlook appears choppy, said Percival Stanion, head of asset allocation at Barings.
EX-VODAFONE
Vodafone was a top FTSE 100 faller, down 4.4 percent, as the market heavyweight traded ex-dividend, alone knocking over 12 points off the blue chip index.
Overall 16.83 points were removed from the index by ex-dividend considerations, with Capital Shopping Centres, Intertek, National Grid and WPP also losing their payout attractions.
Among the minority blue chip gainers, broker comment played an important role. G4S was the top riser, up 1.8 percent as Espirito Santo initiated coverage on the security services firm with a buy rating.
Anglo-French property investor Hammerson added 1.4 percent as Morgan Stanley upgraded its stance to overweight.
And Aggreko rose 0.8 percent after Canaccord Genuity upgraded the temporary power provider’s rating to buy, saying momentum in the business outweighs valuation concerns.