Updated: 10:39 GMT, 10 November 2025
The FTSE 100 climbed nearly 1% in early London trading on Monday, edging back toward its record close after weekend progress in Washington on a bill to end the 40‑day US government shutdown lifted global risk appetite. Drinks giant Diageo led the index higher after naming former Tesco chief Sir Dave Lewis as its next CEO, while energy majors firmed alongside Brent crude. As of 10:30–10:40 GMT the FTSE 100 traded around 9,775, up roughly 0.9%, close to last week’s all‑time closing high of 9,777.08. [1]
Market snapshot (intraday)
- FTSE 100: 9,775.71, +0.96%. Nears prior record close of 9,777.08 set on 5 Nov. [2]
- Brent crude: ~$64.15/bbl, +0.8%, supporting energy heavyweights. [3]
- GBP/USD: ~1.317, little changed to modestly firmer; UK 10‑year gilt yield ~4.48%. [4]
What’s driving today’s move
US shutdown breakthrough boosts sentiment. A bipartisan bill advanced in the US Senate would reopen the federal government through January and restore back pay, a step markets read as a near‑term de‑risking event. European equities, including the FTSE 100, responded with broad gains as traders rotated back into cyclicals and financials. The measure still requires final passage, but the momentum was enough to brighten Monday’s tone. [5]
Big movers on the FTSE 100
Diageo (DGE): +6–7% intraday — The Guinness‑to‑Johnnie Walker owner named Sir Dave Lewis as CEO, effective 1 January 2026. Investors welcomed the hire of the turnaround veteran, sending the shares to their strongest one‑day gain in years and making Diageo the morning’s standout riser. Lewis will step down as chair of Haleon at year‑end. [6]
Energy majors firmer — Shell and BP ticked higher in tandem with crude. Separately, Shell said it will exit two UK offshore wind projects following a strategic review; the shares were little changed to modestly higher in early trade. [7]
Banks supportive — HSBC added close to 1%, helping financials underpin the index as bond yields nudged up and risk appetite improved. [8]
Defence names steady‑to‑higher — BAE Systems gained around 1%, continuing to benefit from robust order visibility and sector momentum seen in recent months. [9]
Context: still within touching distance of records
Last Wednesday (5 November) the FTSE 100 set a fresh record close at 9,777.08, driven by energy and resilient earnings. Today’s rebound leaves the benchmark within a whisker of that mark as macro uncertainty eases and corporate newsflow turns supportive. [10]
Sectors & themes to watch today
- Consumer staples: Diageo’s leadership change is the clear catalyst; watch read‑across for peers in beverages and household staples. [11]
- Energy: Oil’s gentle rise and Shell’s wind‑portfolio decision keep the majors in focus. [12]
- Financials: Modestly firmer gilts and improved global risk tone aided banks; HSBC remains a bellwether after recent corporate moves. [13]
The macro mix
- Oil: Brent near $64 supports the FTSE’s heavyweight energy complex. [14]
- FX & rates:Sterling ~1.317 versus the dollar and UK 10‑year gilts ~4.48% keep exporters and rate‑sensitive shares in balance. [15]
- US policy risk: Market relief hinges on the US shutdown bill clearing both chambers; failure would likely re‑ignite volatility. [16]
Company news in brief (FTSE‑related)
- Diageo appoints Sir Dave Lewis as CEO (start date 1 Jan 2026); shares jump. Lewis will step down as Haleon chair at year‑end. [17]
- Shell to exit two UK wind projects after strategic review; energy complex trades firmer alongside Brent. [18]
Outlook: What to watch next
- US House vote & implementation timeline on the shutdown bill — a decisive catalyst for global risk assets this week. [19]
- UK rates & fiscal calendar — gilt moves and sterling reaction as investors look toward late‑November budget plans and evolving Bank of England rhetoric. [20]
- Earnings & guidance updates from FTSE heavyweights as 2025 winds down, with positioning sensitive near record levels. [21]
Methodology & notes
Prices, index levels, commodities, FX and UK gilt yields referenced above reflect delayed, intraday values around 10:30–10:40 GMT on 10 November 2025. Company and policy developments are sourced from primary disclosures and major wire services. [22]
Sources: Reuters live market data (indices, Brent, GBP/USD, UK 10‑year), Reuters and press statements on Diageo leadership, and major outlets tracking US shutdown progress and European equity moves. [23]
This article is intended for informational purposes and reflects market conditions at the time of writing.
References
1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.reuters.com, 9. www.reuters.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.reuters.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.reuters.com, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.reuters.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.reuters.com, 23. www.reuters.com


