FTSE 100 FINISH LINE 18/5/26 

Index Rallies, Domestic Cyclicals Stall

The FTSE 100 rallied 1.3%, but the tape was far from a clean UK domestic re-rating. The index-level strength sat awkwardly alongside weakness in the most policy- and rate-sensitive pockets, with investors still applying a Westminster discount to domestic cyclicals. The message from the market was clear: headline UK equity performance can improve, but the burden of proof remains high for sectors exposed to housing affordability, regulation and household cash flow. Housebuilders were the clearest pressure point, falling 2.4% despite Rightmove reporting that asking prices for British homes in May rose by more than usual for the time of year. Rather than treating firmer asking prices as a demand signal, investors appeared more focused on affordability, mortgage costs and the risk that any resilience in prices complicates the path to improved transaction volumes. With housing policy and fiscal choices still live political issues, the sector remains vulnerable to any shift in expectations around taxes, subsidies or planning reform. Banks also lagged, down 0.3%, even as the finance ministry outlined planned changes to ring-fencing rules designed to create a more “agile and proportionate regime". The muted response underlines that regulatory easing alone is not enough to shift sentiment while investors remain focused on net interest margin pressure, credit quality and potential political scrutiny of the sector. In effect, the market welcomed the direction of travel but refused to pay up for it, keeping UK financials in the penalty box until the fiscal and rate backdrop becomes clearer. Single-stock stories provided the upside ballast. Centrica rose 2.8%, the top performer on the FTSE 100, after Berenberg raised its price target, reinforcing the market’s preference for visible cash generation and stock-specific catalysts over broad domestic beta. That dynamic defined the session: own companies with earnings resilience, balance-sheet support and idiosyncratic upgrades; remain cautious on sectors where Westminster, rates and consumer pressure still dominate the investment case.

The Finish Line: The FTSE crossed higher, but domestic cyclicals were still running with ankle weights — this was a rally built on selective stock stories, not a full-throated vote of confidence in the UK economy.

TECHNICAL & TRADE VIEW – FTSE100

Daily VWAP Bullish

Weekly VWAP Bullish

Above 10500 Target 11000

Below 10100 Target 9469