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AstraZeneca pegs back Britain's FTSE after takeover snub

* FTSE 100 down 0.6 pct

* AstraZeneca (NYSE: AZN - news) dives after rejecting Pfizer (NYSE: PFE - news) offer

* EasyJet (Other OTC: ESYJY - news) buoyed by Ryanair results

By Tricia Wright and Alistair Smout

LONDON, May 19 (Reuters) - Britain's top shares fell on Monday, pressured by a sharp drop in pharmaceutical firm AstraZeneca after it rejected rival Pfizer's higher takeover bid.

AstraZeneca dived 12.9 percent after turning down Pfizer's 55 pounds/share take-it-or-leave-it offer.

That steep decline accounted for around three quarters of the fall on the FTSE 100 index, down 41.38 points, or 0.6 percent, at 6,814.43 points by 1008 GMT.

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AstraZeneca had risen over 27 percent in the month since the first Pfizer bid was reported, and traders said that a deal was now unlikely, with Pfizer reluctant to engage in a hostile approach.

"With Pfizer saying they won't go hostile, it looks like it is pretty much dead," Will Hedden, sales trader at IG (LSE: IGG.L - news) , said.

"The rhetoric from certain government sections about securing jobs in the UK will have been a hurdle and certainly put off AstraZeneca shareholders."

Recent price moves have left AstraZeneca trading at a forward price/EPS multiple of 19.5, according to StarMine data, compared to 15.5 for GlaxoSmithKline (Other OTC: GLAXF - news) and 14.3 for Sanofi (NasdaqGM: GCVRZ - news) , and over double its 10-year median of 9.3.

The FTSE 100 retraced the previous week's 0.6 percent gain, which saw the index touch 14-year highs. On Thursday it came within 0.8 percent of all-time highs set in December 1999.

"With the FTSE 100 close to all-time-high territory, concerns have once again been raised in relation to valuation, which is creating something of a headwind," said Jeremy Batstone-Carr, analyst at Charles Stanley (LSE: CAY.L - news) .

In common with AstraZeneca, the broader market is also trading above long-run average valuations. The FTSE 100 trades at a price to earnings ratio of 13.8, compared to a 10-year average of 11.8, Thomson Reuters Datastream showed.

EasyJet was among the top risers after expectation-beating results from Irish peer Ryanair.

EasyJet had succumbed to profit taking in recent sessions - down 10 percent last week - as investors cashed in profits on a powerful rally seen over the last 12 months. Its shares rose 1.3 percent on Monday. (Editing by Toby Chopra)