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FTSE slips as Greece staves off default

UK index wobbles as investors mull bailout deal; Vedanta Resources (VED.L) gains 7% after announcing restructuring plans.

FTSE slips as Greece staves off default

Britain’s FTSE wavered following the Greek bailout deal as investors considered the long-term structural reforms needed to stabilise the country’s finances.

The benchmark UK index of blue-chip shares slipped 0.29%, or 17 points, to 5,928 and the Mid-250 index slid 0.36%, or 40 points, to 11,380.

Vedanta Resources (VED.L) topped the FTSE 100 index to take on 95p, or 7%, to £14.53 as the India-focused mining company announced plans to restructure its business.

The move may result in a merger of two of its subsidiary companies, Steralite Industries and Sesa Goa. See the FTSE’s performance and the market’s top winners and losers.

Greece may need further support

Investors across Europe mulled the €130 billion bailout granted to Greece from the European Union and International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Although the deal drew a line under months of speculation that Greece would default on its debt repayments, investors were still unconvinced that the move would truly stabilise the country’s finances in the long term.

Dominic Rossi, global chief investment officer at Fidelity Worldwide Investment, said: ‘After months of wrangling about the second bailout, and on the day of its announcement, we now discover we may need a third bailout.

‘The resolution to the Greek problem still eludes European finance ministers despite the amount of public money being made available to Greece. My view remains that at some stage Greece will voluntarily default and leave the euro.’

Other stock markets in Europe also fell, as Greece was guaranteed its second bailout: Germany’s DAX index dropped 0.49% to 6,914, France's CAC 40 index shed 0.14% to 3,468, and the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares fell back 0.46% to 1,086.

Stateside markets opened after Washington Day on Monday to embrace the news, with the Dow Jones breaking above 13,000 points to reach levels not seen since May 2008.

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1 comment so far. Why not have your say?

David Rowse

Feb 21, 2012 at 18:38

Is this a case of another worthless piece of paper with "peace in our time" written on it; promises which actually promise nothing?

When will our politicians grow up and face up to reality - understanding the world as the rest of us understand and live it?

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