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FTSE 100 drops as Rio Tinto disappoints, US-Iran tensions are a factor

London's FTSE 100 fell from record highs Thursday. Rio Tinto, the global mining company, was blamed for the decline after it missed its expectations on annual earnings. Meanwhile, simmering U.S.-Iran tensions kept investors cautious.

Blue-chip index fell 0.7% by 1101 GMT after two consecutive sessions of closing at record highs. The domestic mid-cap FTSE 250 fell 0.5%.

Rio Tinto's shares fell by 4.4% following the announcement of flat earnings for its mainstay iron ore division, which missed expectations. However, this was offset by a strong performance from its copper business.

Investors around the world were worried as Washington and Tehran increased military activity in the oil-rich Middle East even though Geneva talks on Tehran's nucleo programme showed signs of progress.

Investors looking to diversify from U.S. stocks that are being pressured by AI concerns have flooded into UK stock markets in recent days.

London Stock Exchange Group, among other movers rose 0.7% following reports that activist investor Elliott Investment Management was pressing the exchange operator to?conduct a full review and?launch an 5 billion pound buyback ($6.76 billion).

British Gas's owner Centrica dropped 5.3% from the top of the blue-chip index, after it warned that the profit forecast for 2026 at its energy trading arm was likely to miss. It also halted the share buyback program after reporting a 39% decline in annual profits. (Reporting by Tharuniyaa Lakshmi in Bengaluru; Editing by Mrigank Dhaniwala)

(source: Reuters)