FTSE 100 steady again as interest rate concerns creep in, Imperial Brands weighs

The FTSE 100 lagged behind US stocks again on Wednesday as concerns about interest rates weighed on sentiment, and declines for Imperial Brands and Compass Group offset gains in BAE Systems.

The S&P 500 added another 0.7% yesterday to take the index 0.3% higher on the year. The rally was led by the world’s largest tech shares, with Nvidia rallying 5% and Palantir jumping 8%.

However, concerns about interest rates in the UK prevented London’s leading index from absorbing enthusiasm radiating from the US.

The FTSE 100 was just about positive, adding 0.1%, at the time of writing.

“Stocks stateside have gone on a run as more trade deals are inked, but the baton hasn’t been passed to the FTSE 100, which is flat in early trade,” said Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets, Hargreaves Lansdown.

“The more cautious sentiment may partly have been prompted by concerns that interest rates look set to stay higher for longer in the UK. Bank of England policymakers have been striking notes of wariness about the risk that inflation may stay stubbornly above target.”

Imperial Brand was the FTSE 100’s top faller after currency swings sent reported revenue 3.1% lower and operating profit down by 2.5% in the six months to 31st March. However, it was the news that the CEO was stepping down which caused shares to drop by over 7%. The group enjoyed constant currency growth across all regions.

Gold shares were again among the losers as ongoing improvements in trade relations between the US and key partners further reduced the interest in gold mining stocks. Endeavour Mining fell 0.7% while Fresnillo gave up 0.1% on Wednesday.

“Despite yesterday’s rebound, gold continues to show clear signs of short-term weakness. The precious metal is now trading steadily below $3,300/oz as key drivers in recent weeks — including trade tensions and inflationary pressure — have simultaneously shown signs of easing,” said Linh Tran, Market Analyst at XS.com.

Compass Group shares were down 4% after the food group announced reasonable first-half sales growth but opted to invest cash back into the business and hold off fresh share buybacks.

BAE Systems was the FTSE 100 top riser after Saudi Arabia demonstrated its defence spending power through a deal with the US. BAE Systems shares were 2% higher at the time of writing.

Burberry shares soar as strategic plan bears fruit

Burberry shares were sharply higher on Wednesday after the luxury brand revealed the initial success of its ‘Burberry Forward’ strategic plan, designed to improve retail sales.

Following a difficult start to the year, Burberry has begun to turn things around after launching its strategic plan, with the pace of sales declines slowing to 5% in H2 compared to a 20% decline in H1.

Burberry has taken decisive steps to rebalance its product offering with a “fewer, bigger ideas” strategy and aligned pricing with luxury market expectations. In-store visual merchandising has been enhanced, while digital styling updates have delivered improved online performance.

Burberry is going back to basics to revive sales. The brand was built on the famous check pattern that hasn’t featured as heavily in recent lines, and analysts have highlighted the group’s efforts to refocus on design synonymous with the brand’s legacy.

“Burberry is refocusing on heritage staples like its iconic trench and checked coats, moving away from short-lived fashion trends. This reinforces its brand identity, appeals to loyal and traditional customers, and may help cushion against downturns in the luxury market,” said Yanmei Tang, Analyst at Third Bridge.

“However, challenges remain. Our experts note that in categories like leather goods and footwear, Burberry struggles to compete with more established luxury players such as Louis Vuitton and Hermès.”

There are also challenges from the macro environment, which has been far from favourable for luxury brands.

That said, Burberry said they were confident they were ‘positioning the business for a return to sustainable, profitable growth’.

The market liked their optimism and the progress in their turnaround plan to date. Burberry shares jumped over 9% in early trade.

AIM movers: California approval for Eden Research and more disappointment form Revolution Beauty

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Eden Research (LON: EDEN) has received regulatory approval for the use of Mevalone for the control of powdery mildew on grapes in California. This is the most prevalent fungal diseases for grapes in California. The addressable market is €94m. The share price is one-fifth ahead at 3.3p.

Productivity optimisation software provider ActiveOps (LON: AOM) has won upsell work that includes £1m of annualised recurring revenues and £1.5m of training and implementation services. Canaccord Genuity estimates that 93% of its forecast 2025-26 full year revenues of £32.8m. Net cash is likely to reach £21m at the end of 2025. The share price rose 7.66% to 119.5p.

Digital technology company Catenai (LON: CTAI) has signed a subscription agreement with Alludium and the terms are in line with previous announcements. In the initial subscription, Catenai will take a 8.3% stake in Alludium at 73p/share. The share price improved 2.5% to 0.41p.

Angling Direct (LON: ANG) is doing well in a consolidating retail market for fishing tackle retailers. Revenues increased from £81.7m to £91.3m in the year to January 2025. There were six new stores in the UK and a store was opened in the Netherlands one year ago. The MyAD club has 409,000 members and is helping to increase spending. The European loss was reduced, and group pre-tax profit was one-quarter higher at £2m. Net cash is £12.1m after capital investment and share buybacks. The share price improved 5% to 42p.

FALLERS

Cosmetics supplier Revolution Beauty (LON: REVB) has got additional productions into retailers and launched the RELOVE brand, but the US and online wholesale markets are weak. Full year revenues fell 26% to £141.6m. A £10.9m loss is forecast for the year to February 2025. Inventory levels have been slashed, but net debt increased to £26.3m at the end of February 2025, which leaves little flexibility in terms of cash. It could stay at around that level by February 2026, although the company could be near to breakeven this year. Panmure Liberum cut its target share price from 50p to 20p. The share price dived 38.9% to 4.58p.

88 Energy (LON: 88E) has completed its 25-for-one share consolidation. The previous closing price was the equivalent of 1.4375p. The share price has declined 35.7% to 0.925p.

Retail software developer itim Group (LON: ITIM) increased revenues by 11% to £17.9m in 2024. Annualised recurring revenues were flat at £13m, but that was a result of currency movements and there was underlying growth. Services revenues increased helping to improve short-term profitability. There was a swing from loss to a pre-tax profit of £200,000. Cash doubled to £3.8m. There is a strong pipeline of potential business, but the timing of decisions by retailers remains uncertain. A further improvement in profit is expected in 2025. There has been profit taking after the gains over the past year and the share price fell by one-fifth to 46.5p.

Audio visual products Midwich Group (LON: MIDW) says tough trading conditions have continued into 2025 and there has been a mid-single digit fall in organic revenues. There has been growth in the UK, but sales in North America and Europe are lower. Gross margins are slightly better, but there has been a sharp decline operating profit. This means that full year profit will be well below previous expectations. There will be a trading statement on 21 July. The share price is 4.17% lower at 201.25p.

EKF Diagnostics (EKF) has completed its share buyback programme. A total of 4.64 million shares have been purchased at an average share price of 21.48p. The share price declined 4.17% to 19.55p.

Rules-based stock picking and building market-beating portfolios with Stockopedia

The UK Investor Magazine was thrilled to welcome Ed Croft, Founder and CEO of Stockopedia, to the podcast to explore how investors can use rules-based stock picking to build portfolios that have historically outperformed the wider market. Ed shares the core investment philosophy behind Stockopedia – Quality, Value and Momentum (QVM) – and explains how these factors help investors stay focused on the financial traits that drive long-term returns.During the podcast, we discuss:

  • How a structured process can help investors remove emotion from decisions
  • The key company characteristics that underpin consistent performance
  • How this framework has been applied in a model portfolio that hasdelivered a 13% annualised return – beating the S&P 500 and every UK equity fund over the past decade

Ed also highlights past high-performing stocks that have risen to the top using this approach – including Games Workshop, Dart Group and Jet2 — and explains why certain financial traits consistently stand out.Listen to the full episode to learn how rules-based investing can bring structure, discipline, and performance to your investing process.To go deeper and see how to apply this strategy in your own portfolio, join Ed live on Thursday 22nd May at 5pm (BST) for a free webinar “The Smarter Way to Build a Market-Beating Share Portfolio”

Register for the free webinar here

The unswerving search for quality 

Charles Luke, Manager, Murray Income Trust 

“It’s a rare business that doesn’t have a way worse future than it has a past.” – Charlie Munger 

On Murray Income Trust, quality is our lodestar. It is the guiding philosophy that drives our investment decision-making, helping us uncover those companies that can deliver strong, repeatable returns year after year – or in other words – companies that have at least as good a future as their past. Quality companies are rare, and hard to find. We have made it our business to discover them.  

There are clear reasons to search for quality companies. They tend to have two key performance characteristics: their cash flows, revenues and dividends tend to be consistent and predictable in the short-term, but more importantly, their advantages build over time because of careful capital allocation, strong management teams and competitive positioning.  

Equally, these companies will have fewer tail risks and a greater margin of safety. That means they may not see the astonishing rises of more speculative companies, but neither will they see the precipitous falls. They can navigate difficult environments more successfully than their more vulnerable peers.  

Avoid the disasters is an under-rated part of long-term success in fund management. As investor Mohnish Pabrai once said: “I don’t have any wonderful insights that other people don’t have. I just have slightly more consistently than others avoided idiocy. Other people are trying to be smart. All I’m trying to be is non-idiotic.”  

The worry for investors is that these companies are too expensive. Yet we believe that the market consistently underestimates the sustainability of returns from these high-quality companies. While they may not look cheap, they will often be undervalued versus their long-term prospects.  

As with any investment philosophy, targeting quality won’t work all the time. There will be times when markets are in an optimistic mood, and ready to embrace the latest innovation without a great deal of scrutiny. However, over the long-term, we believe that a quality portfolio is not only a source of higher returns, but a tool to lower risk.  

What is a quality company? 

Quality companies will have certain non-negotiable characteristics. It will need a ‘moat’ – an enduring competitive advantage that helps it protect its margins. A range of factors can create this moat. It may be the strength of a company’s intangible assets and intellectual property. Within Murray Income, holdings such as AstraZeneca, Games Workshop or L’Oreal exhibit these advantages. Or it may be network effects, which help companies build advantage over time, such as those for Air Liquide or Mastercard. Or it may be a cost or scale advantage, evident for companies such as Howden Joinery.  

It will need financial strength. This includes high margins, the return it achieves on the capital it invests, and its debt levels. Perhaps the most important factor will be the way a company uses the capital it has available over time. We look for high ‘return on capital employed’ not just over a single year or two, but over the very long-term. One or two years can be due to over-earning, or a lucky investment, but strong capital allocation over many years takes a skill and judgement only exhibited by the most capable management teams.   

Our view is that it is very difficult to be a quality company with a significant debt burden. Why? Because debt makes companies vulnerable, whether to higher interest rates, to a change in business environment, or to a short-term slowdown in sales. In contrast, if a company is well-capitalised, it can thrive through all market conditions. It can exploit weak economic conditions to build market share or take over its competitors.  

Quality companies will also have a strong management team at the helm. The team is likely to have a history of success, with a track record of running companies for long-term sustainable growth. We need to be able to trust that a management team has shareholder interests at heart. 

Valuation will be important, but not in the way many investors believe. Quality companies will rarely be ‘cheap’ on conventional metrics, but to quote Warren Buffett “It’s far better to buy a wonderful company at a fair price than a fair company at a wonderful price.” Investors will tend to underestimate the long-term benefit that a sustainable competitive advantage will provide a company.   

We agree with investment strategist and author Phil Fisher: “Finding the really outstanding companies and staying with them through all the fluctuations of a gyrating market proved far more profitable to far more people than did the more colourful practice of trying to buy them cheap and sell them dear”. 

It is also worth noting that not every insight is quantitative. In fact, quantitative data is often priced efficiently. Qualitative insight is less efficiently priced. Sometimes we need to take a step back from the quantitative and tune in to the softer signals we receive.  

Learning over time 

Quality isn’t always obvious. It is not unusual for companies to have a sheen of strength, but problems may lurk a little deeper. The investment team is well-versed in interrogating a company’s management team and finances, its business model and prospects. Over time, we have learnt to identify red flags. We build on this collective knowledge with every investment decision.  

There are potential traps waiting for the quality investor. A company that is growing its revenues fast, but that’s not creating value, a company with a weak or unproductive culture, companies that overspend on speculative research and development, or companies that are complacent, and fail to spot disruption.  

Not all sectors and industries are created equal – we need to fish where the fish are. It is not possible to find quality companies in every industry. Economies evolve, and there is no use hoping for a revival of the horse and cart when everyone has moved on to the car. We are attentive to the characteristics of individual industries, their long-term prospects and the likelihood of disruption. This is part and parcel of ensuring that companies have a sustainable competitive advantage.  

These companies are still the exception. Few companies exhibit the quality characteristics we value. When we have found those companies, we want to stick with them. There will always be reasons to sell. At the moment, the ructions over trade could send investors scurrying for the exit. Investors may have felt the same during the first round of Trump tariffs, or Covid, or the European sovereign debt crisis. At each point, exiting would have been the wrong decision. We want to take advantage of irrational behaviour, rather than succumbing to it.  

To quote investor Howard Marks, “Experience is what you got when you didn’t get what you wanted”. The future remains unknowable – we will continue to make mistakes, but we will continue to learn from them. All of this is an attempt to shift the odds in our favour, and to align ourselves with the strongest companies over time.  

Important information 

Risk factors you should consider prior to investing: 

  • The value of investments and the income from them can fall and investors may get back less than the amount invested. 
  • Past performance is not a guide to future results. 
  • Investment in the Company may not be appropriate for investors who plan to withdraw their money within 5 years.  
  • The Company may borrow to finance further investment (gearing). The use of gearing is likely to lead to volatility in the Net Asset Value (NAV) meaning that any movement in the value of the company’s assets will result in a magnified movement in the NAV. 
  • The Company may accumulate investment positions which represent more than normal trading volumes which may make it difficult to realise investments and may lead to volatility in the market price of the Company’s shares. 
  • The Company may charge expenses to capital which may erode the capital value of the investment. 
  • Derivatives may be used, subject to restrictions set out for the Company, in order to manage risk and generate income. The market in derivatives can be volatile and there is a higher than average risk of loss. 
  • There is no guarantee that the market price of the Company’s shares will fully reflect their underlying Net Asset Value. 
  • As with all stock exchange investments the value of the Company’s shares purchased will immediately fall by the difference between the buying and selling prices, the bid-offer spread. If trading volumes fall, the bid-offer spread can widen. 
  • Certain trusts may seek to invest in higher yielding securities such as bonds, which are subject to credit risk, market price risk and interest rate risk. Unlike income from a single bond, the level of income from an investment trust is not fixed and may fluctuate. 
  • Yields are estimated figures and may fluctuate, there are no guarantees that future dividends will match or exceed historic dividends and certain investors may be subject to further tax on dividends. 

Other important information: 

The details contained here are for information purposes only and should not be considered as an offer, investment recommendation, or solicitation to deal in any investments or funds and does not constitute investment research, investment recommendation or investment advice in any jurisdiction. Any data contained herein which is attributed to a third party (“Third Party Data”) is the property of (a) third party supplier(s) (the “Owner”) and is licensed for use with Aberdeen. Third Party Data may not be copied or distributed. Third Party Data is provided “as is” and is not warranted to be accurate, complete or timely. To the extent permitted by applicable law, none of the Owner, Aberdeen, or any other third party (including any third party involved in providing and/or compiling Third Party Data) shall have any liability for Third Party Data or for any use made of Third Party Data. Neither the Owner nor any other third party sponsors, endorses or promotes the fund or product to which Third Party Data relates. 

The Murray Income Trust PLC Key Information Document can be obtained here

Issued by abrdn Fund Managers Limited, registered in England and Wales (740118) at 280 Bishopsgate, London EC2M 4AG, authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority in the UK. 

Find out more at www.aberdeeninvestments.com/mut or by registering for updates. You can also follow us on X, Facebook and LinkedIn. 

UK pension managers pledge to boost allocation to UK assets

Seventeen UK pension managers have committed to boosting their allocation to UK assets as part of the Mansion House accord.

The Mansion House accord will see signatories allocate 10% of defined contribution pots to private markets, with 5% of the assets to UK private markets, which would include London’s AIM.

The pledge could see £50bn pumped into UK assets in the coming years.

“This is a major opportunity for the pension and investment industry to support UK growth while delivering improved outcomes for pension savers,” said Amanda Blanc DBE, Aviva Group Chief Executive Officer.

In addition to helping promote the UK’s growth prospects, the accord will also provide pension savers access to markets that have the potential to boost returns over the long term and provide a greater level of diversification.

“These reforms give pension savers wider access to asset classes previously only available to institutions and intermediaries. Private assets can act as a key diversifier in long-term portfolios with the ability to boost people’s retirement incomes alongside the UK economy,” said Helen Morrissey, head of retirement analysis, Hargreaves Lansdown.

“However, for these reforms to work it is vital providers are given the flexibility to implement changes as the best opportunities present themselves rather than to a specific timetable. This is in line with the pension industry’s role to always secure the best outcomes for its members. With this in mind it is positive to see the pledge that government and regulators must support the industry in securing a pipeline of suitable UK investment opportunities for schemes to invest in.”

The seventeen signatures from pension managers will be seen as a big win by Chancellor Rachel Reeves, who is desperately trying to rejuvenate the UK’s investability. Support from domestic pension funds may help draw in overseas capital and lead to more companies choosing London as their destination for a listing.

FTSE 100 steady after storming US rally

The FTSE 100 was largely flat in early trade on Tuesday after US stocks stormed higher overnight amid rising optimism around global trade.

London’s leading index was up 0.1% at the time of writing, following a 3.2% rally in the S&P 500 yesterday driven by tech shares.

The S&P 500 is now higher than it was just before Trump announced his tariffs, and the NASDAQ has officially entered a bull market.

“The FTSE 100 hasn’t quite echoed the enthusiasm seen in US and Asian markets for the partial roll-back of tariffs between trading giants the US and China,” explained Derren Nathan, head of equity research, Hargreaves Lansdown.

“Asian markets continued to bask in the glow of a less onerous outlook for international trade, following strong gains on Wall Street, where stocks have now all but eradicated losses seen so far this year. The tech bulls were out in force, sending the Nasdaq composite up 4.3% as companies with Chinese exposure such as Apple, Amazon and Tesla rallied strongly.”

The FTSE 100’s benign performance so far this week reflects the defensive nature of the index, which is heavily focused towards ‘safer’ sectors such as utilities, precious metals miners and pharma stocks that perform better during times of volatility.

While this meant London’s leading index held up amid the heights of trade uncertainty, it also meant it would lag the peer group during the recovery.

The FTSE 100’s miners were the main contributors to the index in terms of the number of points on Tuesday, with Glencore, Rio Tinto and Antofagasta adding to strong gains yesterday on optimism around the US/China trade deal.

Kingfisher shares rose after peer Wickes reported surging revenue in the early weeks of 2025, driven by higher volumes and flat cost inflation.

Entain was the top riser after UBS upgraded their rating to ‘buy’.

There was weakness in UK-focused banks following news of a slowing UK jobs market. Lloyds, NatWest, and Barclays were all down around 1% at the time of writing.

DCC was the FTSE 100’s top faller after the group reported falling sales in 2025.

Wickes shares rise after higher volumes and transactions lift revenue

Wickes has kicked off 2025 with impressive growth, recording a 6.9% year-on-year increase in overall Group revenue during the first 17 weeks of the year.

The home improvement retailer’s Retail division delivered particularly strong performance, with revenue climbing 9.6% to £396.7m.

This growth was primarily volume-driven, with price deflation remaining close to zero throughout the period. The company’s Design & Installation segment showed signs of recovery, with delivered revenue holding broadly flat year-on-year at £136.4m, supported by previous quarters’ ordered sales growth and contributions from Solar Fast.

Wickes’ TradePro scheme was a real bright spot, with sales rising 13% compared to the same period last year. The programme, which offers savings and convenience to local trade professionals, has seen active membership rise by 14% to 605,000.

DIY sales also grew, fuelled by an increase in customer transactions. The pickup activity may be due to the favourable weather during the period, and investors will be keen to see if this continues in the coming periods.

“This has been a strong start to the new financial year, with the further increase in sales driven exclusively by volume growth, as more customers shop with us,” said David Wood, Chief Executive of Wickes.

“Within Retail, we have gone from strength to strength. We have taken further market share and seen a very good market outperformance in timber, hardware, decor and garden.

“In Design & Installation, we are benefitting from the actions taken to enhance the Wickes offer. This is a segment demonstrating real momentum, with a second quarter in a row of ordered sales growth.”

Strategic expansion continues with four former Homebase stores undergoing conversion as part of Wickes’ plan to open 5-7 new stores in 2025. Three existing stores have been refitted during the period, bringing approximately 80% of the estate to the new format. The company plans to increase technology investments this year to enhance customer experience and support productivity initiatives.

Wickes’ results will be welcome given the significant cost headwinds and uncertainty in the consumer outlook. Wickes shares have had a strong start to 2025, and today’s results validate the year-to-date rally. Further gains in the shares will likely be driven by the macro environment, with Wickes on their strategy and internal goals.

The company said it remains confident about meeting current consensus expectations for adjusted profit before tax in 2025.

AIM movers: ITM Power selected in Asia and Venture Life sells manufacturing operations

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Shares in portable oxygen device developer Belluscura (LON: BELL) rebounded 54.6% to 0.85p after Friday’s announcement of a strategic review, but it has still halved over the week. There is a shortage of working capital. There was cash of $1m and $790,000 of debt at the end of April 2025.

ITM Power (LON: ITM) has been selected to supply 300MW of electrolysers to produce green hydrogen for a power plant in Asia Pacific. This project is subject to final investment decision. The share price moved up 16.2% to 41.6p.

Venture Life Group (LON: VLG) is selling its contract development and manufacturing business to Italy based BioDue so that it can focus on its own self care brands. There will also be a ten year manufacturing agreement. The disposal includes some non-core brands and will generate £53m. The remaining business should have annual revenues of £43m and cash to acquire more brands. The prospective 2026 earnings multiple is eight. The share price is 10% higher at 49.5p.

Oriole Resources (LON: ORR) has found 125 gold-bearing intersections from eight holes on the Mbe gold project in Cameroon. The one is intersection for every 21 metres drilled. The results of holes nine to eleven are expected before the end of June. The share price improved 9.18% to 0.217p.

Velocity Composites (LON: VEL) has renewed its contract with BAE Systems for another three years and gained a price increase to cover higher costs. The company provides composite material kits for the F35 and Typhoon. The share price increased 10.6% to 26p.

FALLERS

Late on Friday, organ transplant diagnostics developer Verici Dx (LON: VRCI) published a circular ahead of a general meeting to gain shareholder approval to issue shares on a non-pre-emptive basis. A fundraising is planned, but no share price has been set. The share price slipped 23.1% to 1.25p.

Water remediation technology developer MyCelx Technologies (LON: MYX) reported 2024 figures in line with expectations. Revenues fell from $10.9m to $4.9m, but that was mainly down to the timing of a $5.4m contract. They are expected to recover to $13.5m in 2025 and that could be enough to breakeven. The share price fell 10.9% to 20.5p.

Occupational health services provider Optima Health (LON: OPT) returned to growth in the second half of 2024 and full year are expected to be £105m, which is 5% lower than in the previous year. EBITDA is expected to fall from £18.2m to £17.6m, but pre-tax profit should be flat at £13.4m. Optima Health was demerged from Marlowe last September. Three acquisitions have been made in 2025, and a military contract has been won that starts in 2027. The share price dipped 4.1% to 187p.

Oil condition monitoring equipment supplier Tan Delta Systems (LON: TAN) reported an expected dip in 2024 revenues from £1.46m to £1.22m, while the loss increased from £1.17m to £1.05m. There is £3.1m in the bank. There is a £35m pipeline of potential business. The share price decreased 2.7% to 18p.

FTSE 100 gains in choppy trade as details of US/China trade deal emerge

The FTSE 100 started Monday’s session firmly higher before falling back as details of the US/China trade deal emerged.

US equity futures surged overnight, leading to a strong start for London’s leading index. However, trade became choppy after the terms of a 90-day deal between the US and China hit the wires and raised questions about positioning in the defensively oriented FTSE 100.

Under the terms of the interim agreement, tariffs on Chinese imports to the US will be reduced to 30%, and US imports to China will fall to 10%.

While this is a major improvement to the 145% tariff on Chinese imports and 125% on US imports, it will still make most goods much more expensive than before the Liberation Day announcement and threaten US economic growth.

That said, the willingness of China and the US to sit down and thrash out a deal is a major boost to risk sentiment and signals that further improvements to the terms of their trade relationship could be achieved in the coming months.

“The US-China tariff truce is a tactical pause, not a final deal but for markets, but it’s a meaningful de-escalation,” explained Lale Akoner, global market analyst at eToro.

“While the structural issues remain unresolved, the signal is clear: neither side wants to push trade tensions further. Slashing duties from 145% to 30% (US) and 125% to 10% (China) marks a dramatic de-escalation, likely aimed at calming markets and averting further economic drag. 

“Still, follow-through matters more than headlines. The deal is still short on detail, and it’s unclear what an “acceptable” outcome looks like for either side.”

London’s leading index touched 8,646 in early trade on Monday – the highest point since Trump announced tariffs in early April – but turned negative shortly after the particulars of the US and China deal.

S&P 500 futures remained positive, but gave up ground in the wake of the announcement.

The FTSE 100’s China-focused stocks were at the top of the leaderboard with Glencore, Anglo American and Standard Chartered all surging more than 5%.

However, AstraZeneca weighed on the index with little progress on the plans for US tariffs on pharmaceuticals.

There were also big declines for precious miners Endeavour Mining and Fresnillo as gold prices tanked on the US/China deal.

The FTSE 100 outperformed other major global equity indices such as the S&P 500 during the worst of the trade-induced volatility, so it wouldn’t be a surprise to see the index underperform as deals are made and risk sentiment improves.