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U.K.’s FTSE 100 hovers near 10,000 mark as Venezuela strikes lift defence, mining stocks

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FTSE market information is displayed inside the London Stock Exchange, in the City of London. (AP Photo/Kin Cheung)

London’s FTSE 100 hovered near the 10,000 mark on Monday, underpinned by gains in precious metal miners and defence stocks after U.S. military strikes in Venezuela sparked geopolitical concerns.

The blue-chip FTSE 100 rose 0.1 per cent to 9,969.45 points by 1130 GMT, having briefly topped the 10,000-point milestone for the first time last week. Meanwhile, the domestically focused mid-cap index was flat.

The FTSE 100 index had also logged strong gains in 2025, outperforming Europe’s STOXX 600 and the United States’ S&P 500, primarily due to strong gains in commodity-linked sectors and expectations of more monetary policy easing by the Bank of England.

On Monday, global headlines were all about the United States’ capture of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro over the weekend and investors will be keen on the outlook for the oil-rich country.

Safe-havens such as gold and silver surged, lifting an index tracking precious metal miners by four per cent. The index was among the top sectoral performers in 2025.

Geopolitical uncertainty also lifted aerospace and defense stocks by 3.6 per cent, with BAE Systems and Babcock International BAB.L up 4.6 per cent each, while Chemring added 3.1 per cent.

Oil prices were largely unfazed as ample global supplies offset concerns about the impact on oil flows. Energy stocks such as Shell and BP were marginally lower.

Among individual stocks, Ashmore jumped as much as 12.6 per cent and hit a one-year high. The emerging markets fund manager holds Venezuelan debt that rallied following Maduro’s capture.

Online auction operator Auction Technology jumped 19.2 per cent after it had rejected a total of 11 buyout proposals from top shareholder FitzWalter Capital as they highly undervalued the British online auction operator and its future prospects.

Bunzl fell 2.4 per cent after brokerage Exane BNP Paribas downgraded the business supplies distributor to “neutral” from “outperform.”

(Reporting by Tharuniyaa Lakshmi in Bengaluru; Editing by Leroy Leo)