By Sara Sjolin, MarketWatch
LONDON (MarketWatch) -- Shares of Rio Tinto PLC led U.K. stocks
higher Thursday after the miner disclosed its latest cost-cutting
plan, while Pennon Group PLC rose in the wake of a well-received
earnings report.
The FTSE 100 index jumped 1.2% to 5,870.30, extending gains into
a third straight day.
Rio Tinto (RIO) rallied 5.1%, as it said it is targeting more
than $7 billion in spending cuts and savings, a move aimed at
shoring up profit margins at a time of weak commodity prices and
rising expenses.
Chief Executive Tom Albanese also said that he's optimistic
about prospects for growth in China but that the outlook for the
U.S. and Europe was more downbeat.
Shares of other mining firms were also on the rise, tracking
gains for most metals prices: Kazakhmys PLC added 6%, Vedanta
Resources PLC gained 2.8% and sector heavyweight BHP Billiton PLC
(BHP) rose 1.9%.
U.K. stocks were also buoyed by Wednesday comments from
President Barack Obama and House Speaker John Boehner, both
expressing optimism that leaders in Washington will agree on a deal
to avert the so-called fiscal cliff -- hundreds of billions in
automatic spending cuts and tax hikes slated to take effect in the
new year, unless U.S. policy makers take action to avoid it.
Banking shares were among other notable gainers in the U.K., as
heavyweight HSBC Holdings PLC (HBC) moved 1.4% higher. Shares of
Lloyds Banking Group PLC (LYG) added 1.5%, Standard Chartered PLC
picked up 1.6% and Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC (RBS) rose
1.5%.
Meanwhile, shares of Pennon Group gained 4.3%, as the water- and
waste-management firm reported a 3.4% increase in first-half pretax
profit and lifted dividends.
Energy shares were also rising, as January crude-oil futures
moved higher.
Shares of BG Group PLC rose 2%, while Royal Dutch Shell PLC
(RDSB) gained 0.4% and BP PLC (BP) nudged 0.4% higher.
Bucking the positive trend in London, shares of Kingfisher PLC
slipped 0.6%. The home-improvement firm said sales fell 3.9% in the
third quarter.
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires