Ftse 100 Index Historical Data
Main article: The oldest continuous index in the UK is the FT 30, also known as the Financial Times Index or the FT Ordinary Index (FTOI). It was established in 1935 and nowadays is largely obsolete due to its redundancy. It is similar to the, and companies listed are from the industrial and commercial sectors. Financial sector companies and government stocks are excluded. Of the original constituents, four are currently in the FTSE 100: Guest Keen & Nettlefolds (), Tate & Lyle, Imperial Tobacco and Rolls-Royce, although Rolls-Royce has not been continuously listed and Imperial Tobacco was a subsidiary of for a number of years.
ICI was removed when it was taken over by Akzo Nobel in January 2008. Two of the original FT 30 companies are still in that index: GKN and Tate & Lyle (membership is not strictly based on market capitalisation, so this does not mean they are necessarily among the top thirty companies in the FTSE 100). The best performer from the original lineup has been Imperial Tobacco. Garritan Personal Orchestra Kp2 Update Windows. See also [ ] Other lists •, worldwide •, on major bankruptcies historically and worldwide •, including the public sector • • • Stock market lists • •, the and the, list the world's largest corporations by market capitalisation • and, a longer FT list, and one for the 'new economy' • and the, equivalent to the in the US and Germany • and the, top 100 in the US and top 110 in Germany • Notes [ ]. Archived from (PDF) on 29 September 2017. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
Index performance for FTSE 100 Index (UKX) including value, chart, profile & other market data. 97 rows This page provides - United Kingdom Stock Market (FTSE 100) - actual. FTSE 100 Indexindex chart, prices and performance, plus recent news and analysis.
• 8 January 2013 at the. • Atkins, Ralph; Elder, Bryce (3 September 2014).. Retrieved 29 March 2017. Hargreaves Lansdown. Archived from on 2 June 2013.
Retrieved 9 May 2015. • Murphy, Joe (20 April 2015). 'Half of FTSE 100 firms have no non-whites at top'.
London Evening Standard. 5 January 2018. Retrieved 5 January 2018. Retrieved 27 April 2015. 29 November 2017. Retrieved 15 December 2017. London Stock Exchange.