FTSE 100 posts best day in six months as stock market rally continues – as it happened

A picture


And finally, a newsflash! The UK’s stock market has just posted its best day in six months.The FTSE 100 index, which tracks the biggest companies listed in London, has closed 118 points higher tonight at 10,122 points, a gain of 1.18% and a new closing high.That’s the biggest daily percentage increase since 10 July, and also the largest points gain since last April when markets were rallying after Donald Trump paused his ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs.Precious metals producer Fresnillo (+5.

2%) was the top riser, following today’s gains in the gold price, followed by Next (+4.9%) which cheered the City by lifting its profit forecasts this morning.Miners and pharmaceuticals firms were also among the risers.Today’s gains come after the FTSE 100 broke through the 10,000 point mark for the first time last Friday.Gerald Toledano, group head of equities at FTSE Russell, says:“The FTSE 100 passing 10,000 points is a landmark moment for the UK market.

It demonstrates the enduring dynamism of British companies and the important role London continues to play as a global financial centre.”Around three-quarters of the revenue of FTSE 100 companies comes from overseas, as many of its members are multinationals, so it’s a better gauge of the world economy than the UK.Earlier today, Japan’s Nikkei closed at a record high and the US Dow Jones industrial average hit a new intraday peak, highlighting that the US intervention into Venezuela has not spooked investors.Neil Wilson, UK investor strategist at Saxo Markets, explains:Long term macro shifting trends in microcosm – deglobalisation, multipolarity, geopolitical risk, economic policy uncertainty, trade disruption..

.it’s all there in the Venezuela situation and we can expect more to come.Removing Maduro is just the latest phase in Trump’s reordering the global balance of power via a mix of trade, economic, diplomatic and military means.So, evolution not revolution but let’s not diminish what a big deal this is and what it points to.It marks a major shift in the way the global power game is played, and we cannot ignore what risks this could pose to investors even if markets kinda yawned and shrugged off the geopolitics for the moment.

That’s all for tonight….GW“Confidence is easy to knock, hard to rebuild, and a powerful force when it comes to market performance.Currently London’s blue-chip index is surfing a wave of investor optimism, with the FTSE 100 closing at another fresh record high,” says Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, adding:“Classy and classic sectors like finance, pharma, big oil and high street retail stalwarts are back in fashion, with investors looking for consistent, income driving stocks as a companion to the jam tomorrow tech titans which have dominated US markets over the past couple of years.Last year might have provided no end of worrying headlines but markets took most of those geopolitical tensions in their stride, and current questions about what the White House may or may not be considering are broadly being overlooked, for now.”And finally, a newsflash! The UK’s stock market has just posted its best day in six months.

The FTSE 100 index, which tracks the biggest companies listed in London, has closed 118 points higher tonight at 10,122 points, a gain of 1.18% and a new closing high.That’s the biggest daily percentage increase since 10 July, and also the largest points gain since last April when markets were rallying after Donald Trump paused his ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs.Precious metals producer Fresnillo (+5.2%) was the top riser, following today’s gains in the gold price, followed by Next (+4.

9%) which cheered the City by lifting its profit forecasts this morning.Miners and pharmaceuticals firms were also among the risers.Today’s gains come after the FTSE 100 broke through the 10,000 point mark for the first time last Friday.Gerald Toledano, group head of equities at FTSE Russell, says:“The FTSE 100 passing 10,000 points is a landmark moment for the UK market.It demonstrates the enduring dynamism of British companies and the important role London continues to play as a global financial centre.

”Around three-quarters of the revenue of FTSE 100 companies comes from overseas, as many of its members are multinationals, so it’s a better gauge of the world economy than the UK.Earlier today, Japan’s Nikkei closed at a record high and the US Dow Jones industrial average hit a new intraday peak, highlighting that the US intervention into Venezuela has not spooked investors.Neil Wilson, UK investor strategist at Saxo Markets, explains:Long term macro shifting trends in microcosm – deglobalisation, multipolarity, geopolitical risk, economic policy uncertainty, trade disruption...

it’s all there in the Venezuela situation and we can expect more to come.Removing Maduro is just the latest phase in Trump’s reordering the global balance of power via a mix of trade, economic, diplomatic and military means.So, evolution not revolution but let’s not diminish what a big deal this is and what it points to.It marks a major shift in the way the global power game is played, and we cannot ignore what risks this could pose to investors even if markets kinda yawned and shrugged off the geopolitics for the moment.That’s all for tonight….

GWThe US Dow Jones industrial average has just touched a new record high, up 0.4% today at 49,217 points.Amazon are the top riser, up 2.4%.I’m sure all Guardian readers received a well-deserved visit from Santa last month.

But Wall Street missed out, as Joe Mazzola, head trading & derivatives strategist at Charles Schwab, explains today:“Wall Street flatlined early Tuesday following Monday’s “risk-on” rally inspired by weekend events in Venezuela.Market participants face a day that’s sparse in terms of data and earnings, potentially leaving geopolitics front and center.On a lighter note, despite yesterday’s gains, the “Santa Claus rally” failed to materialize for the third year in a row, with Monday the last day of the traditional seven-session window.The S&P 500 index fell 0.1% over those seven days.

”The UK market, though, did enjoy an end-of-year boost, followed by smashing through the 10,000 point mark at the start of 2026.Pharmaceuticals firms are also pushing the London stock market to new peaks.AstraZeneca (+5.3%) and GSK (+4.4%) are now among the top risers on the FTSE 100 index, which is up 1.

5% in late-afternoon trading….The Californian biotech Amgen has bought an Oxford University spinout specialising in cancer treatments, Dark Blue Therapeutics, for up to $840m (£620m).Its lead drug treats acute myeloid leukemia (AML), an aggressive blood cancer.Dark Blue’s chief executive Alastair Mackinnon told the Guardian that it’s a “dreadful disease, it’s like bad lung cancer”.He added:“There’s a sort of kaleidoscope of treatments, the backbone of which is really quite difficult to take cytotoxic chemotherapy, quite old fashioned chemotherapy.

And then there are some targeted molecules that address very small patient populations.So it’s quite a mosaic clinical picture at the moment.”He thinks Dark Blue’s treatment “could address a lot of AML patients.And we’ve got very strong biology.This is going to translate in the clinic”.

It is in preclinical studies and clinical trials with volunteers could take around four years, before the drug is submitted for regulatory approval, assuming trials go well.Jay Bradner, executive vice president of research and Development at Amgen, said: “Acute myeloid leukemia remains one of the most difficult cancers to treat, and we see an urgent need for new mechanisms capable of changing the trajectory of this disease.”Dark Blue was set up in 2022 from an incubator at Oxford University and its main shareholders are Oxford Science Enterprises, the US drugmaker Bristol Myers Squibb and Germany’s Evotec.The biotech’s management and researchers, a team of 15, will stay on and remain in Oxford.Eek.

Activity in the US service sector slowed last month, and tariffs are being blamed!That’s according to the latest survey of purchasing managers at American firms, from S&P Global.It found that growth in activity at US services firms slower last month, due to a slowdown in new work.Worryingly, firms also reported that input costs and selling prices increased sharply in December.The PMI report says:Panelists commented on a degree of uncertainty in market demand, with client budgets and spending reportedly squeezed.Tariffs remained a source of instability, especially in relation to foreign demand.

Latest data showed new export business declined in December for a second time in the past three months.Although modest, the rate of contraction was the steepest since last May.This pulled the US service sector down to 52.5 in December, showing the lowest rate of growth in eight months, down from 54.1 in November.

Stocks are inching higher on Wall Street in early trading, adding to yesterday’s gains.The Dow Jones Industrial Average has gained 40 points, or 0.08%, to 49,016 points, towards yesterday’s record high, while the benchmark S&P 500 index is 0.2% higher.Donald Trump has claimed that the surge in US stock markets is due to his trade war.

In an all-caps post on Truth Social, the US president also expressed hope that the Supreme Court does not declare his tariffs illegal, saying:The USA markets just hit another ALL TIME HIGH - ALL OF THEM!!! THANK YOU YOU MISTER TARIFF!!! PRAY THAT THE UNITED STATES SUPREME COURT ALLOWS OUR COUNTRY TO CONTINUE ITS UNPRECEDENTED MARCH TOWARD UNPARALLELED GREATNESS! BOTH OUR NATIONAL AND FINANCIAL SECURITY HAVE NEVER BEEN STRONGER!Yesterday, the Dow Jones industrial average hit a record high, while the broader S&P 500 share index hit its highest level on Boxing Day.During 2025, the S&P 500 rose 16.4% (slower than London’s FTSE 100), but Trump is on shaky ground claiming that “Mister Tariff” gets the credit.Markets actually tanked last April after the US president announced his ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs, only to rebound once he postponed them.Last year’s rally was driven by enthusiasm over artificial intelligence, and hopes that US interest rates will be cut this year Trump has appointed a new, dovish, chair of the Federal Reserve.

Oil has risen to its highest level since Boxing Day.Brent crude is up 0.8% today at $62.23 a barrel, as its brief drop yesterday morning continues to unwind.Yesterday, shares in US energy companies jumped on hopes that they could profit from Venezuela’s oil reserves.

Analysts have warned, though, that billions of dollars of investment would be needed, and also that Venezuela’s dense and sticky oil – although ideal for some US refineries – might only be profitable if oil prices were higher.So although Venezuela does have large oil reserves, some industry experts mutter “Volume is vanity.Viscosity is sanity.”In the insurance world, AIG has announced that chief executive Peter Zaffino will step down by the middle of this year and shift to the executive chair’s seat.AIG has also appointed Eric Andersen, a former Aon executive, as president and CEO-elect from 16 February.

The moves follow unexpected disruption to AIG’s leadership plans late last year.The company had lined up the former chief executive of Lloyd’s of London, John Neal, to be its next president, only to withdraw the offer after learning that Lloyd’s had launched an investigation into an alleged inappropriate workplace relationship.The FTSE 100 is romping higher.The blue-chip share index is now up 106 points so far today, or just over 1%, at 10,114 points, a new intraday high.Next remain the top riser, now up 4.

2%, after raising their profit forecasts this morning after a decent Christmas.Pest control firm Rentokil are also up over 4%, after Morgan Stanley raised their recommmendation.
cultureSee all
A picture

Jon Stewart on Trump’s military intervention in Venezuela: ‘This is all exhausting’

Late-night hosts tore into the Trump administration’s surprise military attack on Caracas, capture of president Nicolás Maduro and vague plans to “run” Venezuela.Jon Stewart wasted no time in his first Daily Show appearance of 2026, immediately digging into Donald Trump’s shock decision to remove Maduro from power in the early hours of 2 January, which more than a dozen countries condemned as a “crime of aggression” to the UN.“Now, obviously, this is actually a very fraught moment for the world,” he said on Monday evening. “It is highly unusual for any government, any sovereign nation, to violate the airspace and territory of another sovereign nation and hit the grab and go on their president.“Look, no one knows how this operation is gonna work out,” he added

A picture

‘I wanted that Raiders of the Lost Ark excitement – you could die any minute’: how we made hit video game Prince of Persia

Programming was very open back in the 1980s. You had to teach yourself, either from magazines, or by swapping tips. When you wrote a video game, you submitted it on a floppy disk to a publisher, like a book manuscript. In my freshman year at Yale university, I sent Deathbounce, an Asteroids-esque game for the Apple II computer, to Broderbund, my favourite games company. They rejected it, but took my next effort, Karateka, a side-scrolling beat-’em-up

A picture

The Guide #224: Bondage Bronte, to more comeback tours – what will be 2026’s big cultural hitters ?

Welcome to 2026! I hope you are enjoying the final dribblings of the festive break, before reality bites on Monday. As is now tradition (well, we did it once before), this first newsletter of the new year looks at some of the big questions we hope will be answered in the next 12 months, across film, TV, music and games. Hopefully it will double up as a decent primer for the year ahead too, though for a more exhaustive rundown check the Guardian’s 2026 previews for film, music, TV, gaming, stage and art. Right, let’s get on with it:A storyline likely to rumble on through the year is the proposed purchase of Warner Bros by Netflix, which will require government approval (certainly not a given), not to mention all manner of contractual fine-tuning, before that big red N gets stamped on Warners’ famous water tower. Just enough time then for Hollywood’s greatest wrangler of spectacle, and newly installed head of the Director’s Guild, Christopher Nolan to demonstrate the value to Netflix of putting mass-market movies on the biggest screens possible

A picture

My cultural awakening: I May Destroy You helped me confront being spiked

When I May Destroy You aired in the summer of 2020, I hadn’t yet been spiked. Michaela Coel’s comedy-drama, based on her own experience of sexual assault, follows Arabella (Coel) as she realises she was drugged and raped on a night out. With one in four women in Britain having experienced sexual violence, the 12-part series was a difficult watch for many. If not relatable, then confronting and familiar; something that had happened to others, but close enough to know that it could happen to you. Three months later, it did happen to me

A picture

The Traitors to Dry Cleaning: the week in rave reviews

Claudia Winkleman returns with the regular version of the hit gameshow, while the left-field indie quartet spread their wings. Here’s the pick of the week’s culture, taken from the Guardian’s best-rated reviewsBBC iPlayer; next episode SaturdaySummed up in a sentence Series four of the “civilian” Traitors introduces an audacious new wrinkle to keep its players – and its viewers – on their toes.What our reviewer said “Having grown the series’ following with The Celebrity Traitors, the BBC could easily have rolled out another civilian season using past templates and felt sure of a record-breaking audience. Instead, they’ve upped the ante and made the format even twistier.” Elle HuntRead the full reviewFurther reading New Traitors contestants include detective, crime writer and psychologistBBC iPlayerSummed up in a sentence David Attenborough brings his lifelong sense of wonder to the city’s wildlife, from foxes to peregrine falcons, in this exquisite special

A picture

From Song Sung Blue to Theatre Picasso: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Song Sung BlueOut now In 2008, an inspirational documentary about Neil Diamond tribute band Lightning & Thunder warmed hearts with its unconventional love story about Mike and Claire Sardina. Now it’s been adapted into this drama, with all Neil Diamond songs present and correct, and Kate Hudson and Hugh Jackman in the lead roles.Peter Hujar’s DayOut nowBen Whishaw stars as the photographer and artist-activist of New York’s gay liberation movement, who photographed figures such as Susan Sontag, Fran Lebowitz and John Waters. Set over the course of one day in 1974, this is an adaptation of the book by Linda Rosenkrantz, played here by Rebecca Hall.Menus-Plaisirs: Les TroisgrosOut nowFrederick Wiseman, the godfather of durational documentary, is back with a four-hour epic, observing a Michelin-starred family restaurant in rural France