
UK shares gain as investors assess company news, economic data
June 26 (Reuters) - UK shares edged higher on Thursday, with the midcap index hitting a two-week peak as investors digested a mixed bag of corporate results and mulled the outlook for interest rates after data indicated softening consumer spending.
The internationally focused FTSE 100 (.FTSE), opens new tab rose 0.4% by 1100 GMT, while the domestically focused midcap index <.FTMC> gained 0.6%.
Traders also scrutinised Shell's (SHEL.L), opens new tab latest comments after the oil giant denied reports of ongoing talks to acquire rival BP (BP.L), opens new tab. Shares in both energy companies traded marginally higher in the morning.
Industrial (.FTNMX551020), opens new tab and precious metal miners (.FTNMX551030), opens new tab led sectoral gains, tracking higher mineral prices as a weaker dollar made resources cheaper for holders of other currencies.
Fresnillo (FRES.L), opens new tab, Antofagasta (ANTO.L), opens new tab, Anglo American (AAL.L), opens new tab and Endeavour Mining (EDV.L), opens new tab each added over 2%.
Car distributor Inchcape (INCH.L), opens new tab gained 6.2% to top the midcap FTSE index after maintaining fiscal-year outlook through cost-cutting measures that offset U.S. tariffs and increased competition.
The midcap index has outperformed the FTSE 100 this quarter and is on track for its biggest quarterly rise since late 2020.
Analysts note that domestically focused companies have been relatively insulated from trade uncertainties, while the UK remains among the few countries to have signed a trade deal with the United States.
On the data front, British retail sales slumped this month and expectations within the industry for July also deteriorated, a Confederation of British Industry survey showed.
Recent data reports have signalled a softening economy, and traders are now pricing in a 25 basis point Bank of England rate cut in September, according to LSEG data.
Among other stocks, Associated British Foods (ABF.L), opens new tab rose 1.1% after the food retailer said it would close the UK's largest bioethanol plant by September unless the government provides support — potentially the first casualty of Britain's tariff deal with the United States.
Greeting card retailer Moonpig (MOONM.L), opens new tab slumped 9.6% to touch a more than two-month low after forecasting slower earnings growth and announcing its CEO's departure.
Outsourcing firm Serco (SRP.L), opens new tab rose 2% on expectations of North American market driven first-half growth due to a high volume of defence contracts from last year.
Consultancy Next 15 Group (NFGN.L), opens new tab slumped 25% after warning full-year 2026 profit would significantly miss market expectations.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Sun
23 minutes ago
- The Sun
Fines for firms who employ asylum seekers slump by a third despite black market migrant workers soaring to all-time high
FINES issued to firms that illegally employ asylum seekers have plunged by a third — despite migrants in the black market soaring to all-time highs. There were 2,171 penalties worth a total of £110.8million in the year to the end of March. 1 That is down 30 per cent from the record high of 3,089 issued in 2016, Home Office figures show. In the last three months of 2024, 35 car wash companies were fined a combined total of £2.95million. But officials now fear companies fined for failing to employ legal staff are simply dissolving instead. Directors are then starting new firms with different names, that inherit none of the legal liability to pay the cash back. Last year, Booom Car Wash Limited, near Arsenal's Emirates Stadium, in North London, was ordered to pay £180,000 for illegally employing four staff. Companies House shows it dissolved on December 6, before it even paid a penny. Golden Hand Car Wash Limited, based in Weston-super-Mare, North Somerset, is currently in the process of closing only months after a £120,000 fine. There were also 12 barber shops fined a total of £540,000. We revealed last week how small boat arrivals can be working on Britain's massive black market within hours of arriving. Deliveroo, Uber Eats and Just Eat — which have all been allowing asylum seekers to work by renting a legal delivery rider's account — now face being made subject to fines after a rule change earlier this year. The Home Office, under the Tories, raised the fine for a first-time illegal worker offence from £15,000 to £45,000 last February. It came after fears firms were writing off the smaller penalty as a tax on employing illegal migrants who were cheaper than British staff. Earlier this year, the Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said criminal gangs were behind efforts to orchestrate black market jobs once small boat crossers arrive in the UK and are placed in a taxpayer-funded hotel. A No 10 spokesman said it was 'right that the spotlight is being shone on this racket' — and will haul in Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Eats bosses this week.


The Sun
23 minutes ago
- The Sun
How car washes are being fined £3m a year for hiring illegal migrants to work – is your local firm among them?
DODGY car washes hiring illegal migrants have been fined £12million over the past four years — with most of it not yet repaid. Shady bosses behind a surge in modern slavery who pay smuggled-in workers next to nothing are simply closing down or selling up after being nabbed to avoid stumping up. 5 5 5 Figures obtained by The Sun on Sunday show the number of street corner firms fined has rocketed 800 per cent since 2021, and £8million in fines is still outstanding. One MP said the level of illegal working was the 'tip of the iceberg' and the Car Wash Association insisted the problem should have been 'nipped in the bud'. As well as being fined, company directors caught using illegal workers can face up to five years in jail or be banned for good. The Home Office publishes names and addresses of firms do not pay. But when we visited several premises, the owners claimed to know nothing of the penalties. One was Sham Car Wash in Grindon, Sunderland, fined £45,000 last year — equivalent to the penalty for one illegal worker. When we called, there were two workers and Saman Maijd, 40, from Iran. He said he and his brother took over at Christmas, after the fine's issue. He added: 'My brother owns the business. I don't know much about what happened with the fine. 'We have to put down the names of the employees in the books. If they don't want to be in the books, then we don't want to employ them. If you don't do it properly, you bring trouble for yourself.' We also went to what had been the Car Clean Centre Hand Wash in Coventry whose owner, Mohsin Aziz Abulkarim, was ordered to pay £180,000 last year. However, we found a new business — Express Hand Car Wash — registered under a new owner. Two workers refused to comment on the fine when approached. Our reporter also called at what had been the Mr Clean Car Wash, on Crown Street, Bradford, which was penalised £80,000. Channel migrants queue for cash in hand jobs as secrets of UK's £260bn illegal economy revealed Again, we were told the business, now called the Dr Clean Car Wash, had swiftly changed hands, the new owner saying he had been running the firm for six months. There is no suggestion any of the companies are operating illegally or employ illegal staff now. Last night, Tory MP Neil O'Brien said those caught were 'the tip of the iceberg'. He said there was a huge amount of modern slavery. He added: "Companies are making a lot of money based on business models on employing illegal, often exploited immigrants. The Government has failed to get a grip." Some suffer with awful skin rashes because they have no protective equipment. Alexander Russell According to Home Office figures, only 18 car washes failed to pay fines for employing migrants in 2021, totalling £289,000 in all. By last year, the figure had surged to 158 businesses owing £7.9million, a 778 per cent jump. Government sources stressed that part of that came under the previous Tory administration and fines had increased under Labour. Alexander Russell, the head of strategy for the Car Wash Association, said: 'These are just the ones who have been caught. I'm sure it's a small minority of the total. 'When they get fined, they close the shop and reopen the next morning under a different name. 'It's difficult to recover these fines because they liquidate the company, and they also say they need more time to pay them. 'The problem was not nipped in the bud in the early days.' 5 5 On the conditions the migrants work in, he said: 'Some suffer with awful skin rashes because they have no protective equipment." Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has vowed to ramp up raids on businesses that hire illegal workers. Last year, Vittorio Dragoti, 28, owner of Fiveways Car Wash in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, was fined £180,000 and banned as a company director until 2032 for hiring four illegal Romanian workers. And Iraq-born Dilshad Shamo, 41, and Iran-born Ali Khdir, 40, admitted people smuggling — operating out of a car wash in Caerphilly, South Wales. Security minister Dan Jarvis said the Government is trying to tackle illegal work. He added: 'Since we took office, we have taken swift action to clampdown on this criminality, with arrests up by 51 per cent and visits up by 48 per cent.'


The Independent
31 minutes ago
- The Independent
Conservative MP refers himself to watchdog over adviser role
A Conservative MP has referred himself to the parliamentary watchdog after it was alleged that he was paid by a company that helped him write questions to government. Former minister George Freeman submitted queries to Labour ministers about the sector the firm operates in, The Times reported. The newspaper published what it said were leaked emails that showed exchanges in which Mr Freeman had asked the company's director what to ask about as he prepared written parliamentary questions related to space data and emissions tracking. He reportedly tabled the questions, which are a way for MPs to ask for more information on the policies and activities of government departments, to the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology and the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero. He became a paid adviser with GHGSat, a monitoring service for greenhouse gas emissions, in April last year. The appointments watchdog Acoba advised him that in taking up the role, 'there are risks associated with your influence and network of contacts gained whilst in ministerial office'. 'In particular, this is a company that is interested in government policy and decisions relating to the civil space sector and emissions. 'You noted you have made it clear to the company that you will not lobby government on its behalf, and this will not form part of your role.' Mr Freeman told the Times: 'As a longstanding advocate of important new technologies, companies and industries, working cross-party through APPGs (All-Party Parliamentary Groups) and the select committee, I regularly ask experts for clarification on technical points and terminology, and deeply respect and try to assiduously follow the code of conduct for MPs and the need to act always in the public interest. 'Throughout my 15 years in parliament (and government), I have always understood the need to be transparent in the work I have done for and with commercial clients and charities and am always willing to answer any criticism. 'I don't believe I have done anything wrong but I am immediately referring myself to the Parliamentary Commissioner for Standards and will accept his judgment in due course.' Mr Freeman and GHGSat have been contacted for comment. A Conservative Party spokesperson said: 'George Freeman MP has referred himself to the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner. 'It would be inappropriate for the Conservative Party to comment further whilst the Commissioner's inquiries are ongoing.' The Lib Dems and Labour called for Tory leader Kemi Badenoch to suspend him. A Labour spokesperson said: 'Cash for questions was a hallmark of Tory sleaze in the 1990s, and three decades on the same issue has raised its head again. 'George Freeman has referred himself for investigation so now Kemi Badenoch must suspend him from the Tory whip.' Liberal Democrat Deputy Leader Daisy Cooper MP said: 'This looks like the same old sleaze and scandal people have come to expect from the Conservative Party. 'Kemi Badenoch should immediately suspend the whip from George Freeman while this is investigated. 'Failure to act would confirm that even after being booted out of government, the Conservatives are still hopelessly out of touch.' The MP for Mid Norfolk is currently on the science, innovation and technology committee and a trade envoy. He was responsible for the UK space agency in his previous role as a minister in the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology under Rishi Sunak.