FTSE down as miners and M&S fall
By Dominic Lau
LONDON (Reuters) - The top share index shed 1 percent on Wednesday, extending the previous session's sharp losses as miners fell on weaker coal prices and Marks & Spencer (MKS.L) slumped after a profit warning, though drugmakers rose.
The FTSE 100 .FTSE closed down 53.6 points at 5,426.3 to touch a three-month low in a volatile session after trading as much as 1.6 percent higher. On Tuesday, the benchmark index lost 2.6 percent.
"It's good to see pharmaceuticals are finally doing what they should be and that's offering a bit of defensive solace. But other than that I am not particularly optimistic about the short-term position," said Tim Whitehead, head of portfolio services at Redmayne-Bentley.
"From what we read with the problem besetting the housing market, the inability to finance mortgages, consumer spending is clearly being impacted ... Things may deteriorate before they improve."
Slumping coal prices hit heavyweight miners, with BHP Billiton BTL.L, Xstrata (XTA.L), Vedanta Resources (VED.L), Antofagasta (ANTO.L), Anglo American (AAL.L), Eurasian Natural Resources (ENRC.L) and Rio Tinto (RIO.L) all down sharply.
AstraZeneca (AZN.L), however, topped the FTSE 100 gainers, up 4.8 percent after the group won a key U.S. patent battle over its second-biggest selling drug, Seroquel, for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
The sector also gained on hopes that its defensive qualities would come to the fore as shares of retailers and housebuilders wilted. GlaxoSmithKline (GSK.L) advanced 3.9 percent.
Dresdner Kleinwort said large-cap pharmaceutical stocks offered relative outperformance, since they had a degree of earnings protection, adding that there could be upgrades over the second-quarter results season.
Index heavyweight Vodafone (VOD.L) added 3.5 percent as traders cited its defensive quality.
On Thursday, all eyes will be on the interest rate verdict from the European Central Bank and data on U.S. non-farm payrolls.
M&S LOSES SPARKS
Marks & Spencer, which has a 0.39 percent weightage on the index, slumped nearly 25 percent after it issued a shock profit warning and said a consumer downturn was likely to be deeper, and last longer, than previously expected.
The share price fall wiped off more than 1.2 billion pounds from Marks & Spencer's market capitalisation.
Within the sector, Next (NXT.L), Kingfisher (KGF.L), Sainsbury (SBRY.L) and Tesco (TSCO.L) shed between 4.8 and 7.9 percent.
Adding to the gloom, figures from the Bank of England showed Britons extracted less cash from their homes in the first quarter of this year, suggesting tighter credit conditions are sapping a key driver for consumer spending. Continued...



