By Carla Mozee, MarketWatch Wolseley lands a buy rating

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- U.K. stocks rose Thursday, with shares of the London Stock Exchange Group PLC driven higher after financial results, but oil issues were hurt as oil prices languished at multiyear lows.

The FTSE 100 index closed up 0.4% at 6,635.45, recouping Wednesday's loss of 0.3%.

Oil everywhere: Oil stocks were in focus as Brent crude dropped below $79 a barrel on London's ICE Futures exchange, trading at its lowest level in four years. Shares of Tullow Oil dropped 5.8%, BP PLC gave up 0.9% and Royal Dutch Shell PLC lost 2.1%, according to LSE data. See more European movers.

Oil prices weren't able to find sustained support after Saudi Arabia's Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi on Wednesday said the international oil market and Saudi oil policy have been subject to wild and inaccurate conjecture in recent weeks, but policy has remained constant in the past few decades and hasn't changed recently.

Al-Naimi's comments "left his country's attitude towards the OPEC meeting due to take place in two weeks entirely unclear," said Commerzbank commodities analysts in a Thursday note. "For as long as the most influential OPEC producer continues to give the impression that it will watch the price collapse without taking any action, the price slide will continue."

Meanwhile, London Stock Exchange shares climbed 1.4% after the company said flotations and fundraising activity helped push profit higher in the first half of its financial year. Pretax profit at LSE was 136.8 million pounds ($215.8 million), up from GBP116 million a year earlier.

LSE is working to close its planned purchase of asset manager Frank Russell Co. before the end of this year, and the completed deal will result in about one-third of LSE's revenue coming from North America, said BESI Research in a note Thursday. "This, we believe, is a key facet of the investment case for the LSE -- one of diversification, not only by business type, but also by geography."

Other gainers on Thursday included heating- and plumbing-products maker Wolseley PLC , up 1.8%, following an upgrade to buy from hold at Berenberg, which said the downward revision in consensus earnings estimates over the last 18 months is now over.

The next earnings upgrade cycle "will be driven by upside risk to Wolseley's U.S. business, where the group can sustainably grow market share. Complemented by underlying market recovery in U.S., residential and nonresidential construction, Wolseley is an attractive proposition," said analysts Michael Watts and Robert Muir.

SABMiller PLC shares finished up 1.2% after opening in the red. The company said trading conditions will be tough in many of its markets for the rest of the financial year. SABMiller, whose brands include Peroni and Miller Genuine Draft, said half-year profit rose to $1.97 billion from $1.71 billion a year earlier. Sales rose 2% to $11.37 billion.

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