FTSE closes at three week high

Thu Nov 12, 2009 8:26pm GMT
 
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By Simon Falush

LONDON (Reuters) - The FTSE 100 hit its highest close in three weeks on Thursday as British Airways soared with investors cheered as a merger with Iberia looked imminent, while gains were also powered by strength in banks.

But the rise was limited by falls in commodity prices hitting miners and energy stocks, which together constitute a third of the index.

The index .FTSE closed up 9.75 points or 0.2 percent at 5,276.50, it's highest close since Oct 19, and touched a peak since September 2008 after ending 0.7 percent higher on Wednesday.

British Airways (BAY.L) rose 7.5 percent after it and Iberia (IBLA.MC) confirmed their boards were holding separate board meetings to consider a merger to create the world's third largest airline by revenue.

"There's rumbling M&A activity ... the BA deal looks close to fruition and results are looking fairly good with BT's cashflow higher than expected," said Grahame Exton, fund manager at Tilney Investment Management in Liverpool.

BT Group (BT.L) gained 3.7 percent after it increased its outlook for the full year after stringent cost cuts helped the former telecoms monopoly deliver strong core earnings. Free cashflow targets were lifted to at least 1.6 billion pounds.

Other telecoms stocks were also stronger, buoyed by improved sentiment on the sector after the BT Group results. Heavyweight Vodafone (VOD.L) added 1.3 percent and Cable & Wireless (CW.L) rose 1.4 percent.

The index is up 19 percent this year and has soared 52.5 percent since touching a six-year trough in March.  Continued...

 
An employee takes gold ingots to be weighed in a room for final weighing and packaging at the Krastsvetmet plant in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk November 16, 2009.   REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
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