The UK’s FTSE 100 has had its best year since recovering from the financial crisis, outperforming global rivals as shares soared against broader economic and political uncertainty.
Mining, defence, and finance shares led the charge with significant gains over 2025.
The UK’s biggest stock market index gained 1,758.36 points, or 21.5%, from the last trading day of 2024 to December 31 2025.
This was the biggest increase since 2009 when the FTSE 100 climbed by 22.1% in the aftermath of the damaging global financial crash.
Closing 2025 at 9,931.38, the index shot past record high levels on multiple occasions through the year and teetered close to surpassing the 10,000 mark.
The year’s success for the blue-chip index has meant it has outperformed European and US peers, including France’s Cac 40 and New York’s S&P 500 – while the gains were more or less on par with Germany’s Dax.
The S&P 500 index is on track to rise about 17% this year.
Investors were drawn to the steady gains of FTSE-listed firms despite broader weaknesses in the UK economy and political uncertainty prompting significant volatility in the global stock markets.
It was a particularly strong year for precious metal producer Fresnillo, whose share price soared by about five-fold over 2025, while gold miner Endeavor Mining’s shares jumped by nearly three-fold.
Defence firms Rolls-Royce and Babcock also strengthened considerably during a year where geopolitical tensions continued to rise, with their share prices roughly doubling.
Bank stocks also rallied amid elevated profits and business progress, with Lloyds Banking Group leading the charge with its share price nearly doubling as a result of steady gains over the course of the year.
Stock market turbulence came to a head in early April when investors were reacting to US president Donald Trump announcing his plans to raise tariffs for countries around the world on US imports.
The FTSE 100 suffered its biggest single-day decline since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, as did Wall Street’s S&P 500 and Dow Jones indexes, before clawing back its losses and returning to growth.
Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell, said the FTSE 100 “has had precisely the right ingredients desired by investors in a year full of political, trade and market uncertainty”.
“This year’s success for the blue-chip index is not a flash in the pan,” he added.
“The FTSE 100 has delivered positive returns in eight of the past 10 years, averaging 9.1% annually over that period including dividends.
“This kind of performance reinforces the attraction of investing over the long term.
