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FTSE 100 pauses following three-day rally, GDP data is in focus

The FTSE 100 index was almost flat in Britain on Thursday, as gains in defence stocks were offset by declines in mining and energy shares. Investors also assessed the latest GDP figures.

The blue-chip index fell 0.06% at 1018 GMT after three consecutive days of gains. The domestically focused midcaps index also dropped 0.1%.

Investors analyzed Wednesday's British GDP for the second quarter. The data showed that the economy slowed down less than expected, despite U.S. tariffs on trade and a weaker job market.

George Brown, Schroders' senior economist, believes that a large part of the slowdown can be attributed to the fact that manufacturers have frontloaded goods during the previous quarter in order to avoid tariffs. He said that the slowdown should be alleviated in the third quarter despite a more difficult global trade environment.

We expect the Bank of England will keep rates at current levels for the rest of the year.

Energy sector led the FTSE 100 down by 1.3%

Harbour Energy, Shell, and BP all fell more than 1%.

The industrial metals sector also fell 1% due to the weakness of copper and iron ore.

Aerospace and Defence Index led the gains with a 2.2% increase.

Centrica, British Gas's owner, rose 2.5% among individual stocks after it announced that it would jointly purchase National Grid Grain LNG Terminal with U.S. based Energy Capital Partners at a cost of about 1.5 billion pounds (2.04 billion dollars).

The insurer Aviva's stock rose 3.5%, reaching a record high of 17 years after it raised its interim dividend. It also reported a 22% increase in the half-year operating profits. This boosted the index for life insurance by 1.6%.

Admiral Group rose 4.8%, after reporting a 67% increase in its half-year profit before tax.

Diploma, a distributor of technical products, fell by 3.4% when finance chief Chris Davies quit over personal conduct concerns. Ragini Mathur, Rashika Singh and Sahal Muhammed in Bengaluru reported the story. Additional reporting was by Rashika Sing.

(source: Reuters)