Today: 9 June 2026
FTSE 100 Today: British Land Rally Masks AB Foods Slide as UK Stocks Edge Up
21 April 2026
2 mins read

FTSE 100 Today: British Land Rally Masks AB Foods Slide as UK Stocks Edge Up

London, April 21, 2026, 10:20 BST

UK stocks nudged up Tuesday, the FTSE 100 inching 0.12% higher to 10,622.06, while the FTSE 250—tracking smaller, mostly UK-focused firms—added 0.39% to 23,030.71 in late-morning trading. Support came from British Land and utility names, but losses in Associated British Foods and housebuilders capped gains.

This matters for investors juggling a cooling—though far from broken—labour market alongside new geopolitical tension from the Iran war. European shares ticked higher, Reuters said, as the door stayed open for Middle East peace talks. Oil dropped early.

UK employment numbers landed with a twist for the market. Average weekly pay, not counting bonuses, edged down to 3.6% for the three months through February, off from 3.8%. Unemployment dropped to 4.9%, a surprise from the previous 5.2%, Reuters said, citing the Office for National Statistics. Still, that unemployment dip owed a lot to people—mainly students—quitting the workforce, not a surge in hiring.

That’s the rates angle running beneath Tuesday’s session. The Bank of England keeps a close eye on wage data—fast-rising pay can stoke inflation, while a slowdown may help keep it in check. Deutsche Bank’s Sanjay Raja put it to Reuters: the labour market is “not out of the woods yet.” Over at KPMG UK, Yael Selfin noted that softer job numbers make a wage-price spiral—where pay hikes and prices chase each other up—less likely. Reuters

Shares of British Land climbed after the company lifted its earnings outlook, crediting AI and tech tenants for a surge in rental growth at its London campuses. “Accelerating demand” from AI and innovation-focused firms is shaping up, CEO Simon Carter said. British Land just inked a 158,000 square foot deal with Anthropic at Regent’s Place, and reported occupancy at 95% as of end-March. Reuters

Shares in Associated British Foods slid to the bottom of the blue-chip leaderboard after the company announced it will separate Primark from its food brands—Ovaltine, Ryvita, and Twinings among them. Chief Executive George Weston described the move as an “important step.” But the numbers weighed: AB Foods posted an 18% drop in first-half core profit and warned that full-year earnings will miss last year’s level. Primark, for its part, continues to grapple with tough rivals like Shein and Temu. Reuters

Housebuilders took a harder hit. Crest Nicholson tumbled roughly 33% after slashing its full-year outlook. Reuters flagged that the drop was shaping up to be Crest’s steepest single-day slide since the COVID-19 market crash in March 2020.

Crest is dialing back its outlook, citing macroeconomic headwinds, elevated rates and flagging consumer sentiment as reasons to focus on cash and shoring up the balance sheet. The homebuilder now targets 1,400 to 1,500 completions—well below the prior range of 1,550 to 1,700—and has started discussions with lenders for short-term covenant relief. Chief Executive Martyn Clark described the move as a “prudent course of action.” Sharecast

The selling didn’t stop at the smaller players—big names like Barratt Redrow, Berkeley, and Persimmon landed on the FTSE 100’s list of losers, with traders punishing the sector for its ties to rising mortgage rates, squeezed build costs, and fading demand. On the flip side, SSE, Centrica, and British Land gained ground. Land Securities picked up as well, helped along by fresh news from British Land.

The rally isn’t broad-based. If Middle East negotiations stall, energy prices could spike, pushing up inflation expectations and making it tougher for the Bank of England to cut rates soon. For UK equities, all eyes may be on Wednesday’s inflation numbers rather than Tuesday’s jobs data to set the tone from here.

Stock Market Today

  • Oil Prices Surge Amid Iran Conflict, Global Stocks Slip on Tech Sell-off
    June 8, 2026, 10:05 PM EDT. Oil prices surged following renewed fighting between Israel and Iran, though gains later moderated. Wall Street partially recovered from last week's sharp sell-off, with the S&P 500 gaining 0.3% and the Nasdaq up 0.9%, driven by a rebound in AI-related semiconductor stocks. Key chipmakers like Micron Technology and Marvell Technology surged nearly 10% after heavy losses on Friday sparked by concerns of an AI-driven bubble. Marvell will join the S&P 500, replacing Campbell's, whose shares fell despite strong quarterly profits. Analyst Michael Wilson of Morgan Stanley called Friday's correction "inevitable and healthy" for sustaining the bull market, targeting an 8,000 level for the S&P 500 by year-end.

Latest articles

Chip Rally Breaks as Nasdaq Faces Tight Labor Market

Nasdaq rises after hours as chips recover

9 June 2026
Nasdaq jumped 0.86% as chip stocks rebounded, with Intel soaring 11.2% on news Google ordered over 3 million AI chips for 2028, while Apple slid 1.9% after unveiling new AI features. Investors await Wednesday’s May CPI inflation report, which could spark volatility in tech and growth stocks.
Broadcom Stock Rebounds, AI Remains an Open Question for Wall Street

Broadcom Stock Rebounds, AI Remains an Open Question for Wall Street

9 June 2026
Broadcom shares jumped 2.8% to $396.60 as chip stocks rebounded after last week’s $1 trillion sector wipeout, but investors remain cautious after Broadcom’s Q2 revenue missed expectations and the company declined to raise its 2027 AI revenue forecast, fueling concerns that rapid AI growth may not meet Wall Street’s high demands.
BitMine Stock Gains as Ether Holdings Approach 5% Target

BitMine Stock Gains as Ether Holdings Approach 5% Target

9 June 2026
BitMine Immersion Technologies shares jumped 6% after revealing ether holdings climbed to 5.54 million tokens, now 4.59% of Ethereum’s supply, with $9.6 billion in crypto, cash and stakes. The company priced a $273.8 million preferred stock offering, with proceeds possibly funding more ETH purchases and staking. BitMine projects $230 million in annualized staking revenues but warns of risks if ETH or financing falters.
Mingteng Stock Jumps 81% After Halting $100M Share Sale Plan

Mingteng Stock Jumps 81% After Halting $100M Share Sale Plan

9 June 2026
Mingteng International shares soared 81.3% to $1.94 after the company ended its at-the-market stock sale plan, having raised about $20.6 million in gross proceeds; trading volume hit 24.2 million, dwarfing its $12 million market value, as the move outpaced gains in other U.S.-listed China auto stocks.
US Stock Market Premarket Today: Why Nasdaq Futures Are Rising Before the Bell
Previous Story

US Stock Market Premarket Today: Why Nasdaq Futures Are Rising Before the Bell

Oil Price Today: Brent Drops Below $95 as U.S.-Iran Talks Test the Market’s Biggest Risk
Next Story

Oil Price Today: Brent Drops Below $95 as U.S.-Iran Talks Test the Market’s Biggest Risk

Go toTop