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FTSE Near Record Highs: A Beginner’s Guide to Investing in UK Stocks, ISAs and ETFs
17 February 2026
4 mins read

FTSE Near Record Highs: A Beginner’s Guide to Investing in UK Stocks, ISAs and ETFs

LONDON, Feb 17 (Reuters) –

  • The FTSE 100 in London ticked up Tuesday as traders raised their expectations for a Bank of England rate cut coming next month.
  • Most newcomers end up starting with a Stocks and Shares ISA—it keeps gains and dividends shielded within the account.
  • Next up for rate watchers: UK inflation data lands Wednesday.

London’s FTSE 100 edged up 0.2% to 10,506.04 points by 1137 GMT, skimming just below its record, as softer UK jobs data prompted traders to ramp up bets on a Bank of England rate cut next month. The FTSE 250 slipped 0.1%, weighed down by weakness in miners, defence names, and a drop in Plus500 after the company flagged a planned executive share sale. Traders kept an eye on Wednesday’s January CPI figures for more clues on rates.

The market has latched onto that rate decision as its key pivot. In a Reuters survey published Monday, 41 out of 63 economists predicted the BoE will trim the Bank Rate by 0.25 percentage point to 3.50% on March 19. Deutsche Bank’s Sanjay Raja expects “the next Bank Rate cut to come in March,” while TD Securities’ James Rossiter noted policymakers were “quite surprised at just how low the MPC’s inflation projection is for 2026.” Reuters

If you’re new to investing, focusing on nailing the next quarter-point rate swing probably misses the mark. Cash rates can tumble fast once the central bank begins cutting, and a single line in an earnings report can send shares sharply higher—or straight down.

For UK stock-market newcomers, a Stocks and Shares ISA is often the default route. This Individual Savings Account shields investments from both UK Income Tax and Capital Gains Tax. According to MoneyHelper, the current ISA allowance sits at £20,000 for this tax year—unused portions vanish after April 5. Within a Stocks and Shares ISA, investors can park funds, ETFs, investment trusts, bonds, or single shares. But it comes with a plain warning: values are not guaranteed, and you might end up with less than you started.

The UK government says you’ll need your National Insurance number to set up an ISA, whether you go through a bank, stock broker, or another financial firm. The paperwork? Straightforward. The fees? That’s where things get complicated—each provider sets their own.

Regulators are urging investors to confirm the identity of firms before transferring funds. The Financial Conduct Authority’s Firm Checker tool helps verify if a company holds the necessary authorization for its advertised services. The FCA has also flagged the risk of scams, noting that fraudsters sometimes impersonate the regulator itself.

There’s a safety net, though it’s slimmer than many newcomers expect. According to FSCS, investment claims are covered up to £85,000 per person, per firm if the failure happened after April 1, 2019. Meanwhile, the Bank of England has set deposit protection for banks and building societies at £120,000 starting Dec. 1, 2025. Neither scheme, however, is meant to make up for losses caused by falling share prices.

Small costs stack up. According to the UK government, most share purchases face a 0.5% stamp duty or Stamp Duty Reserve Tax (SDRT). But if the shares are moved into a depositary receipt scheme or a clearance service, that rate can jump to 1.5%.

Beginners often get tripped up here, either by making things overly complex or piling into risky single stocks. A straightforward option: an index tracker, usually in the form of an ETF (exchange-traded fund). It trades like a share but holds slices of many companies, giving exposure to a broad market with just one buy.

Picking out UK stocks isn’t impossible, though it means trading your free time for a stack of company filings. Limit orders give investors some say over their buy price, while trickling in cash bit by bit helps cushion the blow of a rough session — but neither approach rescues a shaky investment idea.

Antofagasta delivered a real-world case on Tuesday: the copper miner reported a 52% surge in annual core profit, powered by stronger prices that managed to balance out a slight dip in output and heavier spending, as its Centinela expansion hit peak construction. Chief executive Ivan Arriagada put construction at the Centinela second concentrator at about 70% complete by the end of last year. Broker Peel Hunt pointed to a final dividend that landed below consensus—a reminder that such details can punch as hard as profit headlines.

InterContinental Hotels Group leaned on sector demand and capital returns this time. The Holiday Inn parent reported a 2% drop in U.S. RevPAR in the fourth quarter, trailing Hilton and Marriott, though global room revenue climbed 1.6%. It kicked off a $950 million buyback and pitched a 10% dividend bump. “The RevPAR so far has been positive,” CFO Michael Glover told Reuters, hinting that investors are often more focused on future prospects than a single quarter’s stumble. Reuters

When a big deal hits, nothing else really matters. Shares of Schroders shot up 28.5% last week after Nuveen, the U.S. asset manager, said it would acquire the firm for 9.9 billion pounds. It’s a sharp reminder: takeover news can move a stock long before most individual investors even get past the opening lines of the press release.

Insider selling is rarely a comforting sign for newcomers, even if there’s a reason behind it. Plus500 announced that CEO David Zruia, CFO Elad Even-Chen, and CMO Nir Zats are set to offload 1.5 million existing shares—roughly 2.14% of the company’s issued capital—via Goldman Sachs. The move, a secondary transaction, won’t add cash to Plus500 itself and was attributed to the executives’ personal financial and tax arrangements.

The risk case hangs over everything. Hotter-than-forecast inflation? Markets can yank rate-cut wagers in a flash—pound jumps, rate-sensitive stocks get slammed. Misses on earnings or guidance can spark sharp drops in single names, and the fees and taxes don’t go away just because prices fall.

The next data point lands soon. January consumer price inflation numbers from the Office for National Statistics hit at 0700 GMT on Wednesday, with the Bank of England’s rate decision set for March 19.

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