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U.K. Equity Markets Slip as Joblessness Ticks Higher; FTSE 100 Edges Down on Mixed Signals
British stocks retreated slightly on Tuesday amid a combination of headwinds, including softer sentiment in the defense sector and heightened caution surrounding imminent U.S. labor market figures. The benchmark FTSE 100 index declined 8.80 points, representing a 0.11% pullback to settle at 8,116.08 ahead of the midday trading session.
Unemployment Data Weighs on Sentiment
Fresh labor statistics from the U.K. Office for National Statistics revealed that the jobless rate edged up to 5.1% for the three-month period ending in October, compared to 5% in the previous quarter. November payroll figures showed employment headcount dropped by 171,000 year-on-year, or 0.6%, though month-on-month comparisons painted a rosier picture with a gain of 38,000 positions bringing total payroll employees to 30.3 million.
On the wage front, average earnings excluding bonuses accelerated at 4.6% year-over-year during the October measurement period, marginally outpacing economist expectations of 4.5%. When bonuses were included, earnings growth reached 4.7% for the August-to-October window.
Sector-Specific Movements Signal Divergent Investor Mood
Within the broader index, defense stocks bore the brunt of profit-taking. Babcock International tumbled approximately 5.6%, while BAE Systems retreated 2.4%. Energy majors Shell and BP each surrendered between 1.4% to 2%, as did industrial names Melrose Industries and Polar Capital Technology Trust. Vodafone Group, Burberry Group, HSBC Holdings, Scottish Mortgage, and Auto Trader Group similarly recorded meaningful declines.
Despite unveiling a £200 million interim share buyback initiative commencing January 2, 2026, Rolls-Royce Holdings slipped 1.4%. Centrica shares fell following the company’s divestment of a 15% interest in the Cygnus gas field to Serica Energy, a transaction valued at 98 million pounds.
On the upside, travel and consumer-oriented counters demonstrated resilience. EasyJet, JD Sports Fashion, Croda International, and Whitbread advanced 1.7% to 2.2%, while Legal & General, Hiscox, and Admiral Group also climbed notably higher.
Services Activity Outpaces Manufacturing in December
Separately, purchasing managers’ data from S&P Global underscored modest economic momentum heading into year-end. The Composite PMI ticked upward to 52.1 in December from November’s 51.2, surpassing consensus forecasts of 51.6. The Services PMI held steady at 52.1 versus 51.3 previously, while the Manufacturing PMI recovered to 51.2 from November’s 50.2, signaling returning activity in the production sector.