Record low inflation lifts FTSE to all-time highs
However, shares in plumbing supplies group Wolseley, which hit an eight-year high on Friday, fell 3.9 percent after it posted a smaller-than-expected increase in first-half earnings.
The blue-chip FTSE 100 rose as much as 0.4 percent to a new record intraday high of 7,065.08 points. The index then settled back slightly and was up 0.2 percent at 7,054.51 points going into the close of the trading session.
Data on Tuesday showed that British inflation vanished last month, hitting zero for the first time on record, due to low oil and food prices as well as falling prices for consumer goods such as laptops.
The unchanged cost of living will be welcome news for many Britons in the run-up to a national election on May 7, especially as annual wage growth slipped to 1.8 percent at the start of the year.
Rob Hepworth, chief investment officer at Ecclesiastical Investment Management, said the low inflation would boost the UK stock market as it meant British interest rates would stay at record lows for the near term.
"Lower prices for essential, everyday items like food and fuel is a tailwind for the UK economy and also probably pushes interest rate rises even further out into the distance," said Hepworth.
European stock markets were also buoyed after data showed that the private sector in Germany, Europe's largest economy, grew in March at its strongest rate since July.
Some traders expected a short-term pause in the FTSE's winning streak, which has seen the FTSE finally get over the 7,000 point barrier. The FTSE is up around 8 percent since the start of 2015.
"I expect a bit of consolidation," said Manoj Ladwa, head of trading at TJM Partners. "I'd wait for a pullback below 7,000 before going long," he added.
Комментарии