By Barbara Kollmeyer, MarketWatch

BP, Rio Tinto climb

The London stock market surged on Monday, following positive talks between the U.S. and China to ease trade tensions, with gains led by resource and oil stocks.

What are markets doing?

The U.K.'s FTSE 100 climbed by 1.6% to 7,094.28, after closing out the month of November with a 2% decline, and a 0.4% loss on last week

The British pound fell to $1.2716 from $1.2752 late on Friday.

What is driving the market?

President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed a trade truce at the weekend, with the U.S. promising not to implement planned tariff increases on Chinese goods, on a batch of scheduled exports worth $200 billion to the U.S.

crude prices rallied 4% (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/crude-prices-rally-4-as-russia-saudis-signal-output-curbs-2018-12-03), driven by a surprise decision by Canadian producers to cut output, and comments from Russian President Vladimir Putin at the weekend G-20. Putin said he and his Saudi Arabia counterpart have agreed to extend their oil deal to manage supply (http://www.marketwatch.com/story/putin-says-russia-saudis-agree-to-renew-opec-production-cuts-2018-12-02), which drove optimism for the end-week OPEC meeting.

Which stocks were active?

Trade-sensitive resource stocks witnessed the biggest gains with heavyweight Rio Tinto PLC (RIO.LN) up nearly 5% and Antofagasta PLC (ANTO.LN) up 7.4%

Oil stocks also performed well, with heavyweights BP PLC (BP.LN) and Royal Dutch Shell PLC (RDSA.LN) up over 2% each.

Banks also rose, with HSBC Holdings PLC (HSBA.LN) up by 2.8% and Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LLOY.LN) up by 1%.

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

December 03, 2018 08:14 ET (13:14 GMT)

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