FTSE 100 share index hits 9,000 points for the first time – business live | Business

FTSE 100 share index hits 9,000 points for the first time – business live | Business

FTSE 100 hits 9,000 points for the first time ever

Newsflash: Britain’s blue-chip stock index has risen through the 9,000 point mark to hit a new record high.

The FTSE 100 share index hit 9016.98 points at the start of trading in London, up around 0.2% today, taking its gains during 2025 to over 10%.

That’s a new intraday high for the “Footsie” (as it is known in City circles).

As covered in the introduction, the London stock market has benefitted from a range of factors this year, including a move by some investors to diversify away from the US stock market due to concerns over Donald Trump’s economic policies.

The Trump trade war has also helped UK stocks, as Britain is one of the few countries to have reached a trade deal guaranteeing lower tariffs.

Key events

China’s GDP growth slows, but beats forecasts

The financila markets have also been cheered by the news today that China’s economy grew faster than expected in the second quarter of this year.

The world’s second-largest economy grew by 5.2% in the April-June quarter compared with a year earlier, beating forecasts of a 5.1% rise.

That’s still a slowdown from the 5.4% annual growth recorded in the first quarter, but means Beijing is still on track to hit its GDP target for 2025 of “around 5%”.

Activity appears to have been lifted by a rush to beat new US tariffs on Chinese goods.

“China achieved growth above the official target of 5% in Q2 partly because of front loading of exports,” said Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, who added:

“The above target growth in Q1 and Q2 gives the government room to tolerate some slowdown in the second half of the year.”

A 6.8% rise in industrial production in June also boosted China’s GDP in Q2.

Photograph: ING

Lynn Song, chief economist for Greater China at ING, explains:

The biggest beat in June monthly data was in the value added of industry, which surprisingly bounced back to a three-month high of 6.8% YoY, up from 5.8% in May, bucking expectations for a further slowdown.

June industrial production benefited from a pickup of manufacturing (7.4%), in particular hi-tech manufacturing (9.7%), which has been an outperformer amid China’s transition up the value-added ladder.



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