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London’s blue-chip index had its worst session since late February on Friday, touching the lowest level in almost a fortnight to track a fall in global equities.

The FTSE 100 fell 70.97 points to 6,708.71, underperforming its European counterparts and recording its first weekly decline in three weeks.

Boosting the weak sentiment was the US Federal Reserve’s decision not to extend the supplementary leverage ratio, which requires US banks to hold less capital reserves in order to free up cash to inject into the economy with loans.

The Fed “undid any goodwill it generated following Wednesday evening’s meeting” when it kept rates steady and upgraded the US economic outlook, said Connor Campbell, financial analyst at Spreadex.

Reacting on this side of the pond, traders pulled out of stocks over worries that more restrictions on capital requirements could hold back an economic recovery.

A retreat in US treasury yields also weighed on banking stocks. HSBC fell 10.7p to 430.9p, Barclays dropped 1.2p to 182.6p and Lloyds edged down 0.6p to 41p.

Among other key drags was luxury fashion house Burberry, which was knocked by fears a third Covid-19 wave in Europe could delay reopenings and hit demand. The company lost 79p to £20.35, with similar drops on the Continent for groups like Cartier-owned Richemont and France’s Hermès.

Not too far behind was Scottish Mortgage Investment Trust, the flagship investment fund of parent Baillie Gifford, after portfolio manager James Anderson announced his plans to retire. Mr Anderson, who joined Baillie Gifford in 1983, plans to stand for a non-executive role at Swedish investment group Kinnevik. Shares lost 36p to £11.15.

Mining and energy stocks helped to drag the benchmark, despite a rise in oil prices. Oil recouped some of its lost ground, driven by bargain-hunting traders. Brent crude rose by 2.1pc to $64.61 per barrel. Gains, however, were relatively small perhaps pointing at a lack of confidence in the market.

Among them, Rio Tinto shed 87p to £54.71 and Anglo American fell 98p to £28.04, while oil heavyweights BP lost 5.3p to 306.7p and Royal Dutch Shell dropped 14.8p to £14.24.

Among the mid caps, Investec added to losses on the FTSE 250, after the Anglo-South African lender warned it expects full-year profits for 2020 to slump due to interest rates and lower client activity. It expects adjusted operating profit to be 16pc to 24pc lower than the previous year, with the drop offset by “cost containment” and lower-than-expected credit losses. Shares fell 21.4p to 209.7p.

A bright spot on the domestically focused index, which lost 148.25 points to 21,420.31, was Sanne Group.