FTSE 100 logs fifth straight weekly gain; investors assess earnings, data

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
FTSE 100 logs fifth straight weekly gain; investors assess earnings, data teaser image

July 25 (Reuters) - The UK's FTSE 100 closed lower but extended its winning streak to a fifth week on Friday, while investors assessed a mixed bag of corporate earnings and awaited updates on EU-U.S. trade talks.

The benchmark FTSE 100 (.FTSE), closed 0.2% lower, but registered a weekly gain of 1.4%. The midcap FTSE 250 index (.FTMC), also lost 0.2%, but was up 1% for the week.

A market relatively shielded from U.S. tariffs, positive corporate updates, optimism over a potential EU-U.S. trade agreement, and hopes of a Bank of England rate cut had boosted the blue-chip index to all-time highs in recent days.

Data showed British retail sales rose by 0.9% in June, a partial rebound from May's 2.8% plunge which was the biggest fall since December 2023. However, the increase was smaller than the median forecast of 1.2% in a Reuters poll of economists.

A survey showed consumer confidence dipped this month ahead of possible tax increases later this year and households added to their savings.

Construction and materials (.FTNMX501010), stocks led the sectoral decline, falling 1.8%, dragged down by Marshalls (MSLH.L), opens new tab, which tumbled 20.6%, on downbeat full-year adjusted pre-tax profit forecast.

Precious metal miners (.FTNMX551030), fell 1.3% and industrial miners (.FTNMX551020), lost 1%, weighed down by falling gold and copper prices, respectively.

In corporate updates, NatWest (NWG.L), rose 3.5% after the lender said its profit increased by 18% in the first half and the company announced a new share buyback worth 750 million pounds ($1.01 billion).

Wizz Air (WIZZ.L), jumped 11.5% after Barclays upgraded the budget carrier to "overweight".

Close Brothers (CBRO.L), surged 4.9% after announcing the sale of its execution services and securities business, Winterflood, to Marex (8UU.F), for 103.9 million pounds.

On the flip side, Rightmove (RMV.L), fell 1.8% after warning it expects sales growth in the second half of 2025 to be lower than the first half's 10%.

Meanwhile, the European Union and the United States could reach a framework deal on trade this weekend, EU officials and diplomats said.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will meet U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday to discuss U.S.-U.K. trade deal.

Reporting by Sukriti Gupta; Editing by Shailesh Kuber

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