London - London stocks coasted higher Wednesday on the back of a Santa Rally in subdued trade after a long Christmas holiday, while Wall Street continued to flirt with record highs.
The British capital's benchmark FTSE 100 index of top blue-chip firms won 0.4 percent from last Friday's close, as traders returned from a four-day holiday weekend.
Frankfurt and Paris, which had reopened Tuesday, were both barely changed on Wednesday.
Thin trading volumes are expected to continue during what is the last trading week of 2016.
"The FTSE 100 is higher ... as the so-called Santa Claus Rally appears to have begun," noted analyst David Cheetham at brokerage XTB.
"Observers of the markets have for many years noticed a strong propensity for stocks to rise in the period between Christmas and the New Year and this phenomenon appears to be playing out once more."
Accendo Markets analyst Mike van Dulken noted that London was being propped up by the commodities sector on the back of rising oil prices.
The main corporate deal of the day was British energy giant BP, which announced it has bought a network of Australian petrol stations from supermarket chain Woolworths for US$1.3bn (€1.2b).
BP said in a statement that it will establish a strategic partnership with Woolworths in a deal for the purchase, rebranding and operation of Woolworths' existing 527 fuel and convenience stores, plus 16 sites under construction, for the equivalent of AUS$1.8 billion.
The company's share price bumped 1.2% higher to stand at 509.00 pence in mid-afternoon trading in London.
On Wall Street, the tech-heavy Nasdaq pushed higher at the open after having finished at a fresh record Tuesday, while the Dow flirted with the 20 000 milestone.
US stocks have been blazing new record highs following the surprise US election victory of Donald Trump,
In Asia, Hong Kong stocks rose Wednesday to rebound from recent lows.
Tokyo shares ended flat despite Toshiba's second straight double-digit plunge.
Stock in the troubled Japanese conglomerate Toshiba plummeted more than 20 percent as the company said it may book a one-time loss of several billion dollars over its US nuclear business.
Hong Kong finished up 0.8% on the market's first working day since Christmas, while Shanghai slid 0.4% by the close.
Oil prices pushed higher ahead of US energy inventory data due Thursday, but analysts said trading volumes were around half typical levels.
"On such low volumes it's difficult to read much into the moves and focus will turn to OPEC in the new year," said CMC Markets sales trader Alex Furber, referring to planned output curbs by the oil cartel to bolster prices.
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