FTSE bounces into February
LONDON (Reuters) - The FTSE 100 .FTSE bounced into February on Friday, surging 2.5 percent as merger activity heated up the mining sector and after the leading share index put to bed its worst ever January.
The FTSE 100 ended up 149.4 points at 6,029.2. The index lost about 9 percent in January, a month when growing fears of a U.S. recession repeatedly sparked stock market ructions around the globe. But financial markets worldwide remain jittery as investors fret over a cloudy outlook for the world's biggest economy.
"It may be a new trading month, but there's certainly no suggestion that the rampant volatility we saw in January is behind us," said Jimmy Yates, a trader at CMC Markets.
Rio Tinto (RIO.L) shares surged 13 percent after aluminium producer Alcoa Inc (AA.N) and China's Chinalco teamed up to acquire a 12 percent stake in the mining giant for $14 billion, threatening miner BHP Billiton's (BLT.L) efforts to win Rio.
"We've had an amazing day for corporate activity ... That will get the bulls running," said Roger Cursley, UK strategist at Investec.
Closely tailing Rio's top-spot on the gainers list, BHP leapt 9.8 percent. Kazakhmys (KAZ.L) rose 3.9 percent, Anglo American (AAL.L) added 5.8 percent and Antofagasta (ANTO.L) climbed 7.3 percent.
European shares pared gains on Friday after U.S. nonfarm payrolls fell by 17,000 in January, confounding consensus expectations of an increase of 80,000. But data showing U.S. factory activity in January rose more than expected, easing worries about the jobs data.
"Volatility is high ... It's very, very hard for people to keep up," Cursley added. "The chances are we may end February a bit lower than here, but not dramatically so." Continued...
Yuan and dollar slug it out
It's time for markets to take a deep breath: the yuan will not become a reserve currency, let alone dethrone the dollar, this year, next year or any time soon. Full Article

UK
US