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London stock market ending best year since 2009 at record high – business live | Business

Introduction: FTSE 100 heads for best year since 2009

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

The London stock market is ending its strongest year since the aftermath of the financial crisis at record levels.

2025 has been a very strong year for the FTSE 100 – the blue-chip index of UK stocks has climbed by over 21% since the start of January, which would be its best year since 2009.

Last night, the index ended the day at a new closing high of 9,940 points, after touching a new peak of 9,954 points, as a burst of ‘Santa rally’ excitement rippled through the City.

This year’s rally has been driven by mining stocks, precious metals producers, defence companies and banks – in a year in which the gold price has surged, and the dollar has weakened.

And for once, London has outperformed Wall Street – where the S&P 500 index has gained 17%.

Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell, says:

“The global nature of the inhabitants of London’s top-flight index has helped it avoid the doldrums which have held back the more domestically focused FTSE 250…

“Investors have been looking beyond the usual suspects for value and diversification as the US dollar came under pressure and the world continued to be beset with geopolitical turmoil and fears of an AI bubble. An indication that further interest rate cuts are on the cards in the US could enable Wall Street to find a higher gear and minutes from the Fed’s last meeting of the year should also shed some light on that.

“But after that Liberation Day dip which now feels so long ago, European markets have delivered a strong annual performance and today’s surge should help maintain that momentum into the new year.”

The agenda

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Key events

Oil is on track for a chunky fall in annual prices.

Brent crude futures are down nearly 18% in 2025, the biggest annual drop since 2020 when demand slumped during the Covid-19 pandemic.

That puts oil on track for a third straight year of losses, their longest-ever losing streak according to Reuters.

Supply of oil has outpaced demand in a year marked by wars, higher tariffs and OPEC+ output and sanctions on Russia, Iran and Venezuela.

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