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FTSE 100 falls as BT shares wobble on Ofcom order FTSE 100 lower as oil stocks fall
(about 4 hours later)
The market opened lower, with BT Group down after regulator Ofcom ordered it to legally separate from Openreach. Oil companies weighed on the London market as energy shares were hit by a fall in oil prices ahead of the meeting of Opec oil producers on Wednesday.
In early trading, the benchmark FTSE 100 index was down 33.66 points, or 0.5%, at 6,765.81. Shortly before midday, the benchmark FTSE 100 index was down 41.56 points, or 0.6%, at 6,757.91.
BT shares were down 1.4% after Ofcom said it would notify the European Commission of its plans to force the legal separation of Openreach, which runs the UK's broadband infrastructure. The price of Brent crude slid fell 1.7% to $47.40 a barrel on worries that oil producers would fail to agree output cuts.
Ofcom said BT had failed to voluntarily address competition concerns. Shares in oil giants BP and Royal Dutch Shell were both down by about 1.7%.
Shares in UK housebuilders were trading higher on the back of stronger-than-expected mortgage lending figures.
Bank of England figures showed 67,518 mortgages were approved in October, a seven-month high.
Barratt Developments shares rose 2.6% while Persimmon climbed 2%.
Shares in BT Group saw big moves after telecoms regulator Ofcom ordered it to make its Openreach business legally separate.
BT shares fell 1.4% in early trade, but then recovered to stand about 2% higher by lunchtime.
Ofcom said BT had failed to voluntarily address competition concerns, adding it would notify the European Commission of its plans to force the legal separation of Openreach, which runs the UK's broadband infrastructure.
The regulator wants Openreach to become a distinct company with its own board, with non-executives and a chairperson not affiliated with BT. However, it has resisted calls to split Openreach off entirely.The regulator wants Openreach to become a distinct company with its own board, with non-executives and a chairperson not affiliated with BT. However, it has resisted calls to split Openreach off entirely.
Ofcom had originally called for Openreach to become distinct company within BT in July.
"Ofcom isn't really saying anything radically different today in terms of the actual meat of the changes," said Neil Wilson, from ETX Capital."Ofcom isn't really saying anything radically different today in terms of the actual meat of the changes," said Neil Wilson, from ETX Capital.
"What's concerning investors is the detail of the separation, such as the transfer of pension liabilities and budget autonomy - BT's pension black hole has ballooned to top £10bn and this is a concern for investors.""What's concerning investors is the detail of the separation, such as the transfer of pension liabilities and budget autonomy - BT's pension black hole has ballooned to top £10bn and this is a concern for investors."
Elsewhere on the FTSE 100, mining shares were among the biggest fallers, with Anglo American, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto all down by more than 2%. On the currency markets, the pound rose 0.5% against the dollar to $1.2472, and was 0.8% higher against the euro at €1.1786.
On the currency markets, the pound was flat against the dollar at $1.2413, also little changed against the euro at €1.1701.