
UK stocks edge higher as investors assess US-EU deal
The internationally oriented FTSE 100 rose 0.1% as of 0926 GMT, while the midcap FTSE 250 index was up 0.3%.
The U.S. struck a framework trade agreement with the EU on Sunday, which imposes a 15% tariff on most EU goods and requires the bloc to invest around $600 billion in the U.S.
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will meet U.S. President Donald Trump in Scotland on Monday for talks ranging from their recent bilateral trade deal to the worsening hunger crisis in Gaza.
Automobiles and parts stocks led the sectoral gains, up 1.1%. The real estate sector advanced 0.8%, with Rightmove up 2.3% and Segro rising 1.1%.
On the flip side, industrial miners led the sectoral declines, down 0.9%, tracking lower metal prices.
Miners Glencore lost 1.4% and Rio Tinto fell 1%.
In company news, GSK rose 1.3% after the drugmaker and China's Jiangsu Hengrui Pharmaceuticals agreed on a $500 million deal to develop up to a dozen new medicines, including a promising candidate for a chronic lung condition.
Ocean Wilsons Holdings lost 10.6%, top loser on the mid-cap FTSE 250 index, after the investment holding company and Hansa Investment agreed to an all-share merger to create a diversified investment firm with more than 900 million pounds ($1.21 billion) in net assets.
Meanwhile, the Bank of England is expected to slow the pace soon at which it shrinks its 558 billion-pound ($754 billion) holdings of government bonds, with economists hoping for some clarity next week on the central bank's longer-term goals for the stockpile.
Traders are currently pricing in an 86.5% chance of a 25 basis point BoE cut on August 7, according to data compiled by LSEG.
(Reporting by Sukriti Gupta in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli)
Hashtags

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


The National
5 hours ago
- The National
Nvidia defends GPU sales to China amid criticism from Democratic senators
Nvidia has defended itself against recent criticism over a decision by President Donald Trump's administration to grant licences to the company to sell its H20 graphics processing unit (GPU) to China. The response comes after a group of Democratic senators on Monday urged the Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, who largely crafts export policies, to reverse course on the licences. The lawmakers said a decision to sell H20 chips to China was "an abrupt departure" from the administration's position in April that Beijing's access to the processors posed a serious national security risk. "And it undermines the administration's recent Al Action Plan, which purports to strengthen export control efforts on Al compute,' the letter states, referring to Mr Trump's AI strategy that included 90 federal policy actions. The senators also warned that such policy reversals would bolster China's push to use AI to 'strengthen military systems'. The letter is the latest in a back-and-forth battle over how to best protect and promote US AI technology. 'The H20 helps America win the support of developers worldwide, promoting America's economic and national security,' an Nvidia representative told The National. 'It does not enhance anyone's military capabilities, and the US government has full visibility and authority over every H20 transaction.' Shortly after a trip to Beijing this month, Nvidia's chief executive Jensen Huang highlighted the Trump administration's assurances about resuming sales of the H20 to China, and said deliveries would begin soon. The H20 is designed to comply with US regulations that seek to prevent powerful AI technology from being used by countries it views as adversaries. But in recent years, and particularly during former president Joe Biden's administration, the US has sought to clamp down on the export of AI technologies to a greater degree, especially CPUs and GPUs, which have become critical for countries seeking to build up AI infrastructure. Nvidia came out in January against the stronger export controls proposed by Mr Biden, saying these undermined US leadership in AI with a 'regulatory morass'. Since his inauguration, Mr Trump has taken a softer approach to AI-related export controls. Recent deals announced with the UAE to build an AI data centre, which also included security stipulations to prevent the potential diffusion of US technology to adversarial countries, was widely seen as a win for US technology companies that have largely opposed strict export policies. Despite efforts in recent years to prevent the diffusion of US AI technology, some analysts have cast doubt on the effectiveness of the overall policy. A new report from Jefferies, an investment banking and capital market firm based in New York, indicated that strict US export policies had prompted China to recalibrate and build up its own chip-making capability, with companies like Huawei and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation making strides. Regardless, in their letter to Mr Lutnick, the senators maintained that 'restricting access to leading-edge chips has been the defining barrier for China's efforts to achieve Al parity', expressing concern that the Trump administration would make further exceptions to loosen various export policies it once advocated. 'This administration is permitting adversaries access to technologies critical to national security as part of trade discussions without consultation or input from Congress,' they wrote. A spokesperson with the US Department of Commerce said Biden administration didn't impose 'any restrictions on the H20 whatsoever and they flowed freely into China,' adding that the Trump White House was the first to implement a licence requirement for the exports to Beijing. 'The Trump administration will consider any H20 licence applications carefully, accounting for both the benefits and the costs of potential exports from America and considering the views of experts across the US Government,' the Commerce Department spokesperson told The National. White House officials have recently indicated that policies seeking to prevent the export of US AI technology might ultimately backfire.


Al Etihad
8 hours ago
- Al Etihad
US pharma firm Merck to cut jobs as part of $3 bn cost-saving plan
29 July 2025 19:04 NEW YORK (AFP)US pharmaceutical firm Merck announced on Tuesday that it would reduce jobs as part of a cost-cutting plan aimed at reducing costs by $3 billion a year by 2027."The Company approved a new restructuring program, in which it expects to eliminate certain administrative, sales and R&D positions," said a company statement, slightly lowering its revenue forecast for company did not say how many posts would be affected, but added that it would continue to hire employees "into new roles across strategic growth areas of the business."The plan will see Merck reduce its "global real estate footprint," and "continue to optimise its manufacturing network."The announcement came after Washington announced on Sunday that it had signed a trade deal with the European Union that set a 15 percent tariff on most EU goods imported into the United States, including President Donald Trump has in the past threatened a 200 percent tariff on pharmaceuticals, and a US investigation into those levies is revenue reached $15.8 billion in the second quarter, down two percent year-on-year. This was above the consensus expectations by company was hit by declining sales of its HPV vaccine vaccine brought in $1.1 billion in the second quarter (down 55 percent year-on-year), hit by declining demand in China and competition from generic drugs in international markets. Conversely, sales of the cancer drug Keytruda, a heavyweight in oncology, jumped 9% to nearly $8 billion from April to the end of June.


Al Etihad
8 hours ago
- Al Etihad
IMF lifts 2025 growth forecast on 'fragile' easing in trade tensions
29 July 2025 18:21 WASHINGTON (AFP)The IMF raised its global growth forecast Tuesday as efforts to circumvent US President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs sparked a bigger-than-expected surge in International Monetary Fund still sees growth slowing this year, however, even as it lifted its 2025 projection to 3.0 percent -- up from 2.8 percent in April -- in its World Economic Outlook 2024, global growth came in at 3.3 ahead, the IMF expects the world economy to expand 3.1 percent next year, an improvement from the 3.0 percent it earlier the upward revisions, "there are reasons to be very cautious," IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas told AFP."Businesses were trying to frontload, move stuff around, before the tariffs were imposed, and so that's supporting economic activity," he said."There is going to be payback for that. If you stock the shelves now, you don't need to stock them later in the year or into the next year," he means a likelihood of reduced trade activity in the second half of the year and into imposed a 10 percent levy on almost all trading partners this year, alongside steeper duties on autos, steel, and paused higher tariffs on dozens of economies until August 1, a significant delay from April when they were first and Beijing also agreed to lower for 90 days triple-digit duties on each other's goods, in a halt expiring August 12. Talks that could lead to a further extension of the truce are actions have brought the US effective tariff rate to 17.3 percent, significantly above the 3.5 percent level for the rest of the world, the IMF said. If deals unravel or tariffs rebound to higher levels, global output would be 0.3 percent down next year, Gourinchas said. Growth FiguresUS growth for 2025 was revised 0.1 percentage points up, to 1.9 percent, with tariffs anticipated to settle at lower levels than initially announced in country is also set to see a near-term boost from Trump's flagship tax and spending area growth was adjusted 0.2 percentage points higher to 1.0 percent, partly reflecting a jump in Irish pharmaceutical exports to the United States to avoid fresh European economies, Germany is still expected to avoid contraction while forecasts for France and Spain remained unchanged at 0.6 percent and 2.5 percent the IMF anticipates global inflation to keep declining, with headline inflation cooling to 4.2 percent this year, it warned that US price increases will remain above in the world's number-two economy China, however, was revised 0.8 percentage points upwards to 4.8 reflects stronger-than-expected activity in the first half of 2025, alongside "the significant reduction in US-China tariffs," the IMF said. Russia's growth was revised 0.6 percentage points down, to 0.9 percent, partially due to Russian policies but also oil prices, which are set to remain relatively subdued compared with 2024 levels, Gourinchas said.