The pound weakened on Tuesday after fresh UK labour data showed unemployment ticking higher and wage growth cooling more sharply than expected. Equity markets, however, opened firmer in London, while major European indices were mixed.
By 0811 GMT, the blue-chip FTSE 100 was up 0.3%, while sterling had fallen 0.5% against the dollar to 1.3573. Germany’s DAX slipped 0.06%, and France’s CAC 40 gained 0.2%.
UK labour market update
According to figures released by the Office for National Statistics, the UK unemployment rate rose to 5.2% in the three months to December, up from 5.1% previously and marking the highest reading since early 2021.
At the same time, wage pressures continued to ease. Annual growth in regular pay, excluding bonuses, slowed to 4.2% over the same period, down from 4.5% in the prior three-month window.
The combination of higher unemployment and moderating pay growth points to further softening in the labour market, potentially strengthening the case for additional interest rate cuts from the Bank of England at its upcoming meeting.
Corporate highlights
Antofagasta (LSE:ANTO) reported record EBITDA for 2025, supported by stronger copper and by-product pricing. Revenue increased 30% to $8.62 billion, while EBITDA rose 52% to $5.20 billion, lifting the margin to 60.3% from 51.8% a year earlier.
Profit before tax came in at $3.16 billion, and earnings per share including exceptional items climbed to 134.8 cents from 84.1 cents. Operating cash flow rose 30% to $4.25 billion. The board proposed a final dividend of 48.0 cents per share, taking total annual dividends to 64.6 cents, equivalent to a 50% payout of underlying earnings.
InterContinental Hotels Group (LSE:IHG) posted a 16% increase in adjusted EPS for 2025 to 501.3 cents, up from 432.4 cents a year earlier, and opened a record 443 hotels during the year.
However, its Americas division experienced pressure, with fourth-quarter revenue per available room declining 2%, marking the sharpest quarterly drop of the year amid softer US government and inbound international travel. The board approved a new $950 million share buyback for 2026 after completing a $900 million programme in 2025, and proposed a 10% higher final dividend of 125.9 cents per share, bringing the full-year total to 184.5 cents.
Coca-Cola Europacific Partners (LSE:CCEP) reported a 31% rise in operating profit for 2025 and announced a €1 billion share repurchase plan. Reported operating profit reached €2.79 billion, while comparable operating profit stood at €2.81 billion, up 5.4% on a comparable basis and 7.5% on a comparable, FX-neutral basis.
Annual revenue increased 2.3% to €20.90 billion, with adjusted comparable FX-neutral revenue growth of 2.8%, according to preliminary unaudited figures.

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