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Defensive stocks lead rebound in FTSE 100

FILE PHOTO: A man shelters under an umbrella as he walks past the London Stock Exchange

By Boleslaw Lasocki

(Reuters) -UK's FTSE 100 rose on Friday, lifted by defensive stocks at the end of a choppy week that saw investor anxiety over hawkish central banks, weak economic readings and heightened risks of a global recession.

The blue-chip index climbed 2.7%, with the biggest rises in healthcare and consumer staples stocks that tend to decouple from economic cycles.

The domestically focussed FTSE 250 rose 2.3%. Both the FTSE 100 and the mid-cap index snapped a three-week run of losses.

Data showed British retail sales volumes slid by 0.5% in May, showing that consumers cut back on shopping in the face of rapid inflation last month, and an increase in sales in April was revised down sharply.

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Separate figures showed consumer confidence in the UK hit a record low this month.

"It is not just the rising bills of today that are worrying us, it is the prospect of even higher bills tomorrow, and fears of a looming recession, which might cause our finances to unravel entirely," Hargreaves Lansdown analyst Sarah Coles said.

Adding to uncertainty, Boris Johnson's Conservatives lost two parliamentary seats on Friday, a crushing blow to the governing party that has intensified doubts about the future of Britain's prime minister.

Among stocks, Carnival Corp gained 8.7% after the cruise operator forecast a positive core profit for the current quarter, as it returns to full operations even as decades-high inflation and surging fuel costs continue to bite.[nL4N2YB2A2]

Ultra Electronics gained 12.3% after Britain moved forward on approving the acquisition of the defence firm by rival Cobham, after having raised security concerns over the planned transaction.

Shares of GSK rose 2.1% after French drugmaker Sanofi said the vaccine against the Omicron variant of COVID-19, which the two companies worked on jointly, had proved effective.

(Reporting by Boleslaw Lasocki in Gdansk and Amal S in Bengaluru; Editing by Rashmi Aich, Sherry Jacob-Phillips and Andrew Heavens)