March 30 (Reuters) - Britain's FTSE 100 .FTSE index is seen opening lower on Monday, with futures FFIc1 down 0.19%.
KPMG: KPMG's UK unit said on Saturday it plans to cut staff in its auditing division, following a report by Bloomberg News that the company expects that up to 440 people will leave the business if a redundancy consultation proposal goes ahead.
ASDA: British supermarket group Asda is experiencing temporary fuel shortages at some of its forecourts after a surge in demand driven by the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, its boss said on Friday.
DRUG PRICES: Eli Lilly LLY.N wants the UK to regularly raise NHS drug prices and phase out a multi-billion-pound rebate scheme if it is to resume investment, its international businesses president Patrik Jonsson told the Financial Times.
MOTOR FINANCE: Britain's Financial Conduct Authority will update the market after markets close about a multi-billion-pound redress package for millions of consumers affected by mis-sold motor finance.
OIL: Oil prices extended gains on Monday after Yemen's Iran-aligned Houthis launched over the weekend their first attacks on Israel since the start of the U.S.-Israel war with Iran, widening the conflict in the Middle East.
GOLD: Gold prices edged up as the dollar softened, but gains were capped by a surge in energy prices that fuelled inflation worries and further dimmed expectations for U.S. Federal Reserve interest rate cuts this year.
METALS: Aluminium prices rose sharply as market participants braced for a deeper supply shock after Iranian strikes over the weekend damaged two of the biggest producers of the metal in the Middle East.
FTSE: The UK's FTSE 100 edged lower on Friday as uncertainty around de-escalation of the Middle East conflict persisted, though the index clung to slim weekly gains.
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