FTSE 100 preview: Bid talk to boost shares
The FTSE 100 is seen opening up 34-36 points, extending a rally from the end of last week as worries over the violence in Libya and Japan's nuclear crisis abated slightly.
Taking stock: Shares should continue their rally today.
New of M&A activity in the telecoms sector should also help investor sentiment, with AT&T planning to pay $39bn for Deutsche Telekom's T-Mobile USA.
The UK blue chip index closed 22.02 points, or 0.4% higher on Friday at 5,718.13, carrying over Thursday's recovery following falls in the six previous sessions, although the index is still down around 4% in March.
Asian shares advanced on Monday, taking their lead from strong pre-weekend gains on Wall Street, as market players picked up beaten-down stocks after heavy losses last week.
Investors took some reassurance from reports of progress in repairs at a crippled Japanese nuclear power plant, and from comments by billionaire investor Warren Buffett that the recent steep drop in Japanese stocks presented a 'buying opportunity'.
Engineers restored electricity to three reactors at the crippled Japanese nuclear power plant and hoped to test water pumps at the quake-damaged facility soon.
Japanese financial markets were closed for a public holiday on Monday.
Strength in oil prices remained a dampener, however, with Brent crude futures up around 1.9% to just below $116 a barrel, after Western warplanes and missiles hit Libya at the weekend in a bid to force leader Muammar Gaddafi to cease fire on rebels and end attacks on civilians.
Unrest in Syria and Yemen over the weekend also kept traders on edge.
On the domestic front, asking prices for houses in England and Wales are 0.9% higher than a year earlier, a monthly survey by property website Rightmove showed on Monday,
However, British households suffered the sharpest deterioration in their finances in two years this month, a survey by research firm Markit showed on Monday, underlining the fragility of the economic recovery.
Although the Bank of England's chief economist, Spencer Dale, said in a report also published on Monday, that the British economy is on a recovery track and that the weakness of broad money growth may be misleading.
No other British economic data will be released on Monday, although investors will have February inflation numbers on Tuesday, and retail sales figures on Thursday to provide pointers to the health of the domestic economy.
In between that data, the minutes from February's Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee meeting will be published on Wednesday morning, followed by the British government's 2011 Budget pronouncements in the afternoon.
Across the Atlantic, February's Chicago Fed index will be released, followed by February US existing home sales.
The latest quarterly changes to the FTSE 100 index take effect at the start of trading on Monday, with broadcaster ITV and energy services supplier John Wood Group re-entering Britain's top share index, while wealth manager and broker Hargreaves Lansdown makes its blue chip debut.
Investment company Alliance Trust, miner African Barrick Gold, and packaging firm Bunzl are demoted to the FTSE 250 index from the blue chips.
The world's biggest spirits maker Diageo is reported to be considering a $2bn bid for tequila brand Jose Cuervo as The Sunday Times said in an unsourced report that the Beckmann family was in talks to appoint Barclays to explore a possible sale of all or part of the brand.
Royal Dutch Shell is aiming to spend $1bn a year over the next five years on shale gas in China if its explorations works under way prove a success, Chief Executive Peter Voser told Reuters on Sunday,
Rio Tinto has extended its sweetened $3.9bn bid for Mozambique-focused coal miner Riversdale Mining by three days. Also, the global miner is eyeing a tie-up with Russia's Alrosa to develop a large diamond deposit near the northern port of Archangel, the Financial Times said on its website on Sunday, citing unnamed sources.
Property group Hammerson has backed plans by the troubled sportswear retailer JJB to restructure the chain, saying it would vote for the rental cuts when creditors meet on Tuesday, the Daily Telegraph said on Monday.
Opponents hoping to block Rupert Murdoch's News Corp bid for BSkyB have privately admitted they have almost no chance of success after failing to reach a unanimous agreement to go ahead with a legal review, The Financial Times said on Monday.
HMV will this week outline a rescue plan that will include the possible sale of book chain Waterstone's, the Sunday Times reported. An HMV spokesman declined to comment on the report.
Punch Taverns could split itself into two, the Sunday Times said in an unsourced report which said Chief Executive Ian Dyson was studying a plan to spin off Punch's better-performing 'Spirit' division into a separate listed company.
There will be updates today from Essar Energy and Nautical Petroleum.
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