* FTSE 100 up 1%, FTSE 250 up 0.7%
* First exit poll for election result at 2200 GMT
* Trump says Washington close to "big deal" with Beijing
* WPP rises on share buyback agreement
* John Laing lags mid-caps
(Adds news items, analyst comment, graphic, updates to closing
prices)
By Muvija M and Shashwat Awasthi
Dec 12 (Reuters) - UK shares leapt on Thursday as U.S.
President Donald Trump said the United States and China were
very close to a trade deal, providing a shot in the arm to what
had been a wait-and-watch session for markets with Britons
voting in an election.
The FTSE 100 .FTSE rose 1%, driven by a 3% jump in HSBC
HSBA.L and gains in miners and oil stocks on the back of
Trump's comment, which came days before tit-for-tat tariffs are
set to take effect.
The FTSE 250 .FTMC broke a three-day losing streak as it
added 0.7%. Though initially tentative, gains were cemented
after Trump's tweet on trade and a report that the U.S. had
offered to cancel the imminent tariffs on Chinese goods.
The more domestically-inclined index lagged the blue-chip
bourse, however, as traders exercised caution with voting under
way in the general election which could decide the fate of
Brexit.
Intra-day trading volume on the FTSE 100 was at its lowest
since May 1 and the second-lowest so far this year.
"The moves are relatively modest. At this stage, people are
waiting for the exit polls and the election results in the due
course... We are seeing a FTSE 100 out-performance but in the
wider scheme of things, it is modest," Raymond James analyst
Chris Bailey said.
Polls in the run-up to the election had indicated that Boris
Johnson's Conservative Party would win a majority, but recent
estimates have shown that its lead over the opposition Labour
Party narrow, stoking worries of a hung parliament.
Despite earlier holding firm, sterling slipped as traders
booked in profits, helping prop up exporter stocks, while
utilities like Severn Trent SVT.L , which run the risk of
re-nationalisation under a Labour government, dipped.
News-driven gainers saw ad firm WPP WPP.L rise 3.2% after
a share repurchase agreement.
Earlier in the session, sentiment was supported by the U.S.
Federal Reserve signalling that interest rates would likely
remain accommodative. BlackRock's Chief Investment Officer of Global Fixed Income,
Rick Rieder, called it "a very good policy prescription".
John Laing JLG.L fell 10% among midcaps on its worst day
ever, after the infrastructure firm said it expects annual net
asset value to miss market estimates. Balfour Beatty BALF.L rose 4.3% after forecasting annual
profit ahead of its estimates and electricals retailer Dixons
Carphone DC.L jumped 7% as it maintained its full-year
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UK indexes lag world shares since 2016 Brexit referendum https://tmsnrt.rs/2LIK8Rc
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