* FTSE 100 down 3.2%, FTSE 250 down 2%
* Financials, oil majors among biggest drags
* Flutter Entertainment climbs on M&A news
* Metro Bank rises on bond deal
(Adds items, analyst comments, updates to closing prices)
By Yadarisa Shabong and Muvija M
Oct 2 (Reuters) - London's FTSE 100 index endured its worst
day since January 2016 on Wednesday as an overhang from weak
U.S. manufacturing data rekindled global growth worries and cast
a shadow over markets, while investors scrambled for more
clarity as Brexit looms.
The FTSE 100 .FTSE plunged 3.2% to its lowest level in
more than a month and the domestically-focused FTSE 250 .FTMC
dropped just shy of 2%, close to a one-month low.
Losses were seen across the board on both indexes as
investors grappled with a deepening Brexit crisis and fears of a
global slowdown amid heightened transatlantic trade tensions,
while weak U.S. private payrolls data also added to those fears.
"The declines now appear to be accelerating on rising
concern that the ongoing deterioration in the manufacturing
numbers will at some point start to manifest itself in the much
larger services sector," CMC Markets analyst Michael Hewson
said.
At home, Prime Minister Boris Johnson tabled a 'final Brexit
offer' to the European Union and warned that unless the bloc
compromised, Britain would leave without a deal at the end of
this month. "The prospect of a no-deal Brexit is weighing on financial
stocks, as the Bank of England is likely to cut rates should
that occur," CMC Markets analyst David Madden said, adding that
banks' margins could be squeezed in that scenario.
HSBC HSBA.L , which has also been weakened by the Hong Kong
protests, fell 2.7%. The global bank dragged on the blue-chip
index along with oil majors BP BP.L and Shell RDSa.L , which
tracked losses in crude prices.
Souring the already fear-stricken mood, the World Trade
Organization authorized the U.S. to apply tariffs worth $7.5
billion annually on the European Union, including the UK, over
illegal EU subsidies handed to Airbus. In a sea of red, the only green shoot was Flutter
Entertainment FLTRF.L , which jumped 7% after agreeing to an
all-share deal with Poker Stars owner. Shares of mid-cap rival
William Hill WMH.L added 3.6% on the M&A news.
Tesco TSCO.L , Britain's No. 1 retailer, ended marginally
higher after rising as much as 2.3% on better-than-expected
earnings. Shares had opened lower after the surprise resignation
of its Chief Executive Officer Dave Lewis.
"He will certainly be a hard act to follow, given that under
his guidance he pulled Tesco back from the precipice," Hewson
said.
Another notable mover was Metro Bank MTRO.L that surged
26.7% on its best day ever after the troubled lender
successfully relaunched a bond deal. It had also separately
announced the exit of its chairman and founder Vernon Hill.