[R]Commodities, Metals, and Currencies[/R]
Crude oil rose $0.70 to close at $90.83 per barrel for a front month contract, natural gas decreased 12 cents to $7.96 per mBtu, and gasoline futures increased 3.62 cents to close at 230.30 cents per gallon.
Gold increased $3.20 in New York trading to close at $883.70 per ounce, silver closed up 23 cents to $16.24 per ounce, and copper for front month delivery increased 4.90 cents to 323.10 per pound and in London copper futures increased $1.50 to $6,996.00.
Dollar edged higher against euro to $1.4622 and nearly unchanged against yen at 106.860.
[R]1:00PM New York, 6:00PM London – A fall in retail sales in December prompted a decline in pound on the speculation that rates may lowered.[/R]
Stocks in London gained after commodity stocks and retailers helped snap a four-day decline.
In London trading FTSE 100 stocks rose fractionally by 0.01% or 0.7 to 5,901.70.
Of the 102 FTSE 100 stocks 55 gained, 41 declined, and 6 were unchanged. Xstrata led gainers with a rise of 8.59% on speculation BHP Billiton had renewed its bid for Rio Tinto Plc.
Other commodity stocks gained as well. Rio Tinto soared 4.93% and BHP Billiton surged 2.15%.
The Office of National Statistics reported today that sales volume in the quarter to December rose 0.4% from the previous quarter. Sales in the three months to November had climbed 0.1%.
Three-monthly sales volume jumped 0.3% for food stores, while it remained unchanged for non-food stores.
According to the ONS, each sector of retailing rose except for non-specialized stores such as department stores which declined the most since July 2005 by 1.6%.
However sales in non-store retailing and repair gained the most since October 2006 by 4.4%.
Total sales volume in the three months to December increased by 3.6% from a year earlier, while sales volume for predominantly non-food stores surged 4.4%.
Sales volume for textile, clothing and footwear stores was the lowest since February 1999 at 1.0% and sales volume for predominantly food stores edged up 0.9%.
Total sales volume declined by 0.4 % between November and December, with sales volume for non-food stores fell by 0.9% and volumes for non-specialized stores declined 4.3%, the largest decline since February 1994 when it fell 4.8%.
Non-seasonally adjusted value of retail sales for the quarter to December was 2.3% higher than in the same period a year earlier. The average weekly value of sales in December was 1.4% higher than a year ago at 6.8 billion pounds.
Of the FTSE index shares Xstrata led advancers with a rise of 8.59% followed by rises of 6.03% in Sage Group, of 4.93% in Rio Tinto Plc, of 4.88% in Home Retail Group, and of 4.34% in Kingfisher Plc.
Rio Tinto advanced on the speculation that BHP Billiton is prepared to offer 3.5 shares and A$16 per share Rio from the earlier offer of three-for-one offer. |