
FTSE 100 jumps to new record high as investors shrug off tariff woes
Mining and commodity stock particularly helped drive the sharp rise, as investors shrugged off concerns that US tariff rules could contribute to a global recession.
Anglo American, Glencore and Rio Tinto were among the top risers on the FTSE 100 as a result.
Mining giant Rio Tinto was among the big risers on Thursday (Rio Tinto/PA)
Meanwhile, the FTSE 250 index and AIM 100 index were also higher, rising 0.32% and 0.24% respectively during early trading due to the wave of positive sentiment.
Analysts have partly linked the uplift to dismissing recent US tariff announcements as 'noise' after a number of policy reversals by US President Donald Trump.
Dan Coatsworth, investment analyst at AJ Bell, said: 'Investors lapped up shares in the mining, oil and pharmaceutical sectors, showing a risk-on mood.'
'European markets in general continue to shrug off Donald Trump's daily tariff updates, perhaps seeing them as noise and not facts.
'Trump is throwing out numbers left, right and centre, and investors have begun to dismiss anything that isn't set in stone.'
Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: 'The FTSE 100 is stuffed full of multinationals which are sensitive to the outlook for the world economy and with the so-called 'TACO trade' (Trump Always Chickens Out) in full swing, it's benefiting from more optimism around.
'Investors expect that Trump will 'chicken out' from imposing his threat.
'Miners have roared back to life, topping the index; copper prices have hit record levels, which will benefit major producers in the short-term, while fears about a longer-term tax on imports appear to be receding.'
Elsewhere, the value of the pound ticked 0.17% higher against the US dollar to 1.360, moving closer to the three-year-high it struck earlier this month.
Hashtags

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


The Independent
27 minutes ago
- The Independent
Europe has been ‘free-riding' on US security, says Merz
Friedrich Merz has admitted that Europe has historically underfunded its own security and instead relied heavily on the United States. The German Chancellor met with Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in the UK on Thursday to sign a treaty on a range of issues, such as defence and immigration. On his first trip to London as chancellor, Mr Merz described the Kensington treaty as historic. It is the first major bilateral agreement between the UK and Germany to deepen defence cooperation and boost economic growth in both nations. Russia's war in Ukraine has defined the first two months of Mr Merz's chancellorship, as has Donald Trump 's tariffs on the EU. The German Chancellor said he has met with the US president three times now and they are 'on the same page' on Ukraine – both wanting to bring an end to the war. But he admitted that Europe had not historically funded its own security in the past. "We know we have to do more on our own and we have been free-riders in the past," he told the BBC. 'They're asking us to do more and we are doing more." Asked about his relationship with Mr Trump, he said: "We are on the phone once a week; we are coordinating our efforts. One issue is the war in Ukraine, and the second is our trade debates and tariffs." "We are seeing a big threat, and the threat is Russia. And this threat is not only on Ukraine. It's on our peace, on our freedom, on the political order of Europe," he told the Today Programme. Mr Merz said he would do 'whatever it takes' to boost Germany's defence spending and increase the size of its army. At a press conference on Thursday, Mr Merz and Sir Keir discussed ways to boost European support for Ukraine, following Trump's announcement to bolster Kyiv 's stockpile by selling American weapons to Nato allies who would in turn send arms to Kyiv. This includes Patriot air defence missiles Volodymyr Zelensky has urgently sought. Mr Merz said they had discussed Ukraine's need for long-range strike systems, which he called "long range fire". "Ukraine will soon receive substantial additional support in this area," he told the press conference. The treaty includes a clause on mutual assistance which, "in light of the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine, is highly significant", a German official said this week. He said that 'above all, we need clarity on how weapons systems that are given up from the European side will be replaced by the US.'


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Elon Musk leaps to Donald Trump's defense following WSJ ‘hit piece'
Elon Musk rushed to Donald Trump's defense after a damning Wall Street Journal report detailed a lewd birthday letter the president allegedly presented to Jeffrey Epstein. The tech billionaire has repeatedly demanded the release of the unredacted documents related to the disgraced financier's sex-trafficking case since dropping the ' really big bomb ' last month, a baseless claim that Trump was withholding the files because they implicated him. After the Journal described on Thursday a birthday card that appeared to be signed by Trump for Epstein's 50th birthday, Musk abruptly shifted gears, coming to the former president's defense. 'Happy Birthday — and may every day be another wonderful secret,' the message read, according to the newspaper. The report states text is surrounded by a drawing of a naked woman, punctuated by a squiggly 'Donald' mimicking pubic hair. Hours after the report's release, the president's former first buddy said: 'It really doesn't sound like something Trump would say tbh.' Musk retweeted a summary from his AI tool, Grok, casting doubt over the authenticity of the birthday card. In another similar Grok summary, he replied with a fire emoji. Trump denied having anything to do with the card, claiming, 'I never wrote a picture in my life.' 'I don't draw pictures of women,' he told the Journal. 'It's not my language. It's not my words.' He also threatened to sue the Journal if the story was published – a threat he has now vowed to act upon. In a Truth Social post on Thursday night, the president stated that he plans to sue the newspaper, its parent company, News Corp, and its owner, Rupert Murdoch, soon. 'The Wall Street Journal, and Rupert Murdoch, personally, were warned directly by President Donald J. Trump that the supposed letter they printed by President Trump to Epstein was a FAKE and, if they print it, they will be sued,' Trump wrote, referring to himself in the third person. 'Mr. Murdoch stated that he would take care of it but, obviously, did not have the power to do so,' he continued. 'The Editor of The Wall Street Journal, Emma Tucker, was told directly by Karoline Leavitt, and by President Trump, that the letter was a FAKE, but Emma Tucker didn't want to hear that. Instead, they are going with a false, malicious, and defamatory story anyway.' The president also described several lawsuits he has filed against the press, including ABC and CBS, which were settled. The report comes as the Trump administration continues to face backlash after a Department of Justice and FBI memo released last week stated that there was no evidence that Epstein had a 'client list.' Trump has since dismissed Epstein's case as a 'hoax,' a 'scam,' and 'bull****.' He has accused his Democratic predecessors and former officials of fabricating documents related to the case, while chastising some of his MAGA base calling for the files' release, branding them as 'weaklings.' As constituents apply pressure on the GOP to provide more transparency around the Epstein files, House Republicans voted down a Democratic amendment Thursday night. Lawmakers attempted to advance a bipartisan bill calling for the full release of documents related to the convicted sex offender's case. Early Friday morning, Musk admitted on X that it would be 'hard to accept a clean bill not going to a vote.'


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Take Five: Talking politics
July 18 (Reuters) - Slice and dice it anyway you like and the week ahead for world markets will likely be dominated by politics and central banks in some shape or form. Japan votes, the European Central Bank holds its pre-summer break policy meeting, U.S. President Donald Trump's constant pressure on the Federal Reserve chief stays on the watch list and Turkey's central bank meets against a backdrop of domestic political uncertainty. Here's your heads up on the week ahead for financial markets from Rae Wee in Singapore, Lewis Krauskopf in New York and Amanda Cooper, Yoruk Bahceli and Karin Strohecker in London. Much is riding on Sunday's Japan upper house election, which could, at least in the near- to mid-term, shape the fiscal and policy trajectory for one of the world's most indebted nations. Polls suggest Japan's ruling coalition will likely lose its majority, with fiscal hawk Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba potentially stepping down. Longer-dated Japanese government bond yields have scaled new highs as concerns about the deteriorating fiscal outlook grow, following promises of tax cuts and fiscal largesse by opposition parties. Their preference for keeping interest rates low also complicates the Bank of Japan's plans to normalise monetary policy. And while expectations are that trade talks between Tokyo and Washington could make further progress once the election is over, the clock is ticking to an Aug. 1 deadline, when Japan will face 25% tariffs. The ECB is set to pause on Thursday after eight consecutive rate cuts that halved its policy rate to 2%. The threat of a 30% U.S. tariff looms over the euro zone, but there's little that's certain about the scale of trade restrictions that will end up prevailing, so the ECB has no reason to move the dial yet. Policymakers will be reluctant to create the sense that they are reacting to a threat, but they will have to reassess their worst case scenario from June, which foresaw a lower tariff level. Also, the focus isn't on Thursday's decision, but what comes next. Given the scale of uncertainty, traders are unsure. They fully price one more rate cut by year-end, but the timing is up in the air, with a September move seen as a coin toss. U.S. corporate earnings season kicks into high gear with market heavyweights Alphabet (GOOGL.O), opens new tab and Tesla (TSLA.O), opens new tab leading the charge. Q2 results have started flowing in, with major banks expressing optimism about the investment banking outlook for the rest of the year after dealmaking rebounded. More than one-fifth of S&P 500 companies are expected to report in the coming week. Google parent Alphabet and Tesla are the first of the "Magnificent Seven" megacaps to report this period, while results are also due from Coca-Cola (KO.N), opens new tab, IBM (IBM.N), opens new tab and Philip Morris International (PM.N), opens new tab. S&P 500 earnings are expected to have climbed 6.5% in the quarter from the year-ago period, according to LSEG IBES data as of Wednesday. July surveys of business activity across the globe may capture some immediate shifts in behaviour in both services and manufacturing in response to Trump's new Aug. 1 tariff deadline. Global factory activity has struggled to remain in expansionary territory in the last year. Out of 34 of the world's largest economies, 22 have slowing activity - leaving the services sector to do much of the heavy lifting. But that's also starting to show the strain from the uncertainty for anyone from retailers, to hairdressers and accountants, from Trump's chaotic tariff policy. In June, services activity in the United States, the euro zone, China and Germany was slower than in December and well below last June. Among richer nations, only Japan and Britain saw a year-on-year improvement in service-sector activity last month and even that was modest at best. Turkey's central bank is expected to return to rate cuts on Thursday, back on track after market turmoil following an unprecedented crackdown on the CHP opposition party clouded the monetary policy outlook. The March detention of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu - seen as President Tayyip Erdogan's most formidable rival - roiled markets, knocked the lira to a record low, saw stocks trading suspended and prompted the central bank to hike overnight rates to 46% - short circuiting an easing cycle that had only begun in December. A Reuters poll showed expectations for a 250 basis point cut, with some predicting as much as 350 bps. But there's some uncertainty over the speed and scale of easing with markets nervous against the backdrop the opposition crackdown recently accelerating. Central banks in Hungary and Russia also hold rate meetings in the coming week.