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FTSE chalks up third week of gains, led by RBS

* FTSE 100 up 8.16 points at 6,721.34

* G4S (LSE: GFS.L - news) gains as HSBC (LSE: HSBA.L - news) upgrades and floats breakup potential

* RBS (LSE: RBS.L - news) boosted by Carney's softer tone on banks

* BSkyB (LSE: BSY.L - news) falls as Macquarie downgrades on earnings worries

By David Brett

LONDON, Oct (KOSDAQ: 039200.KQ - news) 25 (Reuters) - London's blue chip index inched higher on Friday to chalk up a third straight week of gains, although demand to buy at levels just shy of multi-year highs was tepid.

The FTSE 100 closed up 0.1 percent, or 8.16 points, at 6,721.34 points, just 1.8 percent off a 13-year high reached back in May.

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The index slumped in June but has since climbed almost all the way back as concern over an imminent withdrawal of U.S. monetary stimulus, a big driver for equities, has faded.

Volumes were low at 80 percent of the 90-day daily average, suggesting many investors were staying out of the market.

Leading the index higher was Royal Bank of Scotland, up 3.3 percent after a speech from Bank of England governor Mark Carney on Thursday struck a new, softer tone on the country's lenders, traders said.

FTSE valuations are above their 10-year average, and on a 12-month forward price-to-earnings ratio are up 16 percent since mid-June, Thomson Reuters Datastream showed, potentially curbing demand to chase the traditional end-of-year rally.

"A year-end rally may not happen because investors are too tempted by year-to-date profits. The selling, if it is not already under way by the U.S. Thanksgiving Holiday (Nov. 28), could snowball from then," said Alistair Winter, investment strategist at Daniel Stewart.

The steady stream of downgrades in analyst expectations of future earnings for FTSE firms, according to Thomson Reuters data, is also unlikely to help.

Technical charts, however, showed that while the index might encounter some near-term consolidation, there was scope for further gains.

Valerie Gastaldy, head of technical analysis firm Day By Day, said the FTSE 100 was slowly breaking out of a consolidation pattern that had August and September peaks as its upper levels.

"It should quietly move back to its all-time high (6,950.60) by the end of November or so," she said.

Other winners on Friday included G4S, which climbed 2.2 percent, with traders citing an HSBC note in which the investment bank upgraded the security services firm to "neutral" from "underweight" and talked up the break-up value of the group, as the catalyst.

The world's biggest security services firm said its UK chief executive Richard Morris had resigned at a time when the group was trying to recover from a series of damaging setbacks.

BSkyB shed 2.2 percent with traders citing a note from Macquarie, in which the broker cut its rating to "neutral" from "outperform" on concerns that a coming auction for rights to show Champions League football could hit earnings.

"With limited upside from current share price levels, potential for negative sentiment coming from another aggressive rights auction, and risk in the coming quarters that BT (LSE: BT-A.L - news) begins to impact BSY's broadband growth as marketing levels are sustained, we see 5 percent downside," Macquarie said. (Editing by Susan Fenton)