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London stocks retreat as U.S.-China tensions weigh

Published 29/05/2020, 08:19
Updated 29/05/2020, 09:15
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A street cleaning operative walks past the London Stock Exchange Group building in the City of London financial district, whilst British stocks tumble as investors fear that the coronavirus outbreak could stall the global economy, in London

By Sagarika Jaisinghani

(Reuters) - UK shares fell for the first time this week on Friday, as fears over Washington's response to Beijing tightening its control over Hong Kong overshadowed optimism about a pickup in business activity with the easing of coronavirus-induced lockdowns.

The blue-chip FTSE 100 (FTSE) was down 0.8% with travel (FTNMX5750), industrial (FTNMX2710) and personal goods (FTNMX3760) stocks among the top decliners, while the mid-cap FTSE 250 (FTMC) shed 0.7% to snap a nine-day winning streak.

Banks (FTNMX8350) tracked a decline in gilt yields as investors fled to perceived safe havens ahead of U.S. President Donald Trump's news conference on China's move to impose a national security law on Hong Kong that has raised concerns over its function as a global finance hub.

"The market thinks the security law headline is mostly behind, so it will be looking for the actual list of U.S. reactions and whether it will make a change on Hong Kong's special trade status," said Stephen Innes, markets strategist at AxiCorp.

Renewed U.S.-China tensions have threatened a wider stock market rally that was powered by historic global stimulus and hopes for a post-coronavirus return to economic normalcy.

After crashing more than 36% from a January record high, the FTSE 100 has recovered about 26% since mid-March and is now on track for its biggest two-month gains in a decade.

Still, the index has underperformed its European peers as, despite plans for the economy to reopen from next week, business confidence remains low and car production threatens to slump this year to its lowest in decades. Rolls-Royce (L:RR) tumbled 9.2% as Standard & Poor's cut its credit rating to junk on the disruption to global air travel from the COVID-19 pandemic. Discount retailer B&M rose 2.5% after an upbeat trading update, while building materials supplier SIG Plc (L:SHI) gained 5.9% on plans to raise 150 million pounds ($185.12 million) in new equity.

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Latest comments

UK will need to take in a huge influx of migrants from Hong Kong.
Situation is over blown. Hong Kong is not the financial centre it once was
What they're going to proof?
Can't these 2 countries sit down and talk? Too much problems now in this world created by them
No, because US presidents come and go and China is a one party state with a Communist ideology.
something important for stock market investors
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