By Carla Mozee, MarketWatch

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- U.K. stocks lost ground Wednesday, with concerns about Royal Mail PLC's growth pressuring the company's shares, while pub-landlords traded in the red following a vote in parliament that was unfavorable for the sector.

The benchmark FTSE 100 index fell 0.2% to 6,696.60.

Meanwhile, the pound rose against the dollar in the wake of minutes released from the Bank of England's meeting earlier this month. Sterling (GBPUSD) bought $1.5671, compared with $1.5598 ahead of the release of the minutes. Sterling bought $1.5632 late Tuesday.

The minutes showed the central bank's Monetary Policy Committee voted 7-2 to keep rates on hold, with seven members in favor of leaving the key interest rate at a record low of 0.5%. Policy makers Martin Weale and Ian McCafferty dissented, as they did at the August and September meetings.

"Given the recent sharp falls in [consumer prices], it was reasonable to expect that MPC members McCafferty and Weale would have dropped their hawkish views. But this wasn't to be as they again voted for a 25 basis-point rate rise," said Fawad Razaqzada, technical analyst at Forex.com, in a note. "The market reacted immediately to price in a less dovish BOE than previously thought."

Earlier this week, government data showed U.K. inflation in the U.K. rose by 1.3% in October, compared with 1.2% in September. But the October result was still below the Bank of England's target of 2%.

Leading losses on the FTSE 100, shares of Royal Mail PLC tanked 8.4% after the parcels company said competition from Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) -- which launched its own delivery service -- will limit its growth. Royal Mail also said expansion plans by Whistl, formerly known at TNT Post UK, could reduce its revenue by 200 million pounds ($313.7 million) in 2017-2018.

Royal Mail said half-year interim revenue rose to 4.53 billion pounds ($7.08 billion) from GBP4.52 billion in the previous period. Net profit, however, fell as results in the previous period benefited from exceptional income related to pension provision.

Mining stocks were hit hard as prices for iron ore fell to a more than five-year low. Anglo American PLC fell 2.9%, Rio Tinto PLC (RIO) dropped 2.1%, as did BHP Billiton PLC (BHP) .

On the FTSE 250 index , shares of Enterprise Inns PLC tumbled 16.7%, falling along with other brewery-landlords after U.K. lawmakers voted to allow pub tenants to buy beer from any source and not be tied to drinks supplied by the property owner. Shares of Punch Taverns PLC were shoved 16.8% lower, Greene King PLC lost 4.5% and Spirit Pub Co. sank 6%.

The pub companies "may challenge whether such a change is legal, but this could have material consequences for the tenanted pub sector," said Barclays in a research note. "We estimate that the biggest impact would be on Enterprise Inns and Punch Taverns, which between them own over 9,000 tenanted pubs."

You're invited: A free evening event focusing on investing opportunities in Europe

Will you be in London on Dec. 3? Then you're invited to our MarketWatch Investing Insights event, "The worse Europe gets, the more you should invest."

Governments are in trouble, reform efforts have stalled, unemployment is climbing. the news from the eurozone is bleak. And investors are fleeing. But that's a mistake: The worse the economic data from Europe get, the more you should be buying. Why? Because actions by the ECB will boost asset prices and the stock market in particular. And, big exporters can grow sales. Lower costs and steady sales translate into higher profits and dividends. Join us for an evening of cocktails and conversation to explore these opportunities.

Our panel will be led by MarketWatch Columnist Matthew Lynn, a renowned financial journalist based in London and the author of "Bust: Greece, the euro and the Sovereign Debt Crisis." He'll be joined by Mark Hulbert, MarketWatch columnist and editor of the Hulbert Financial Digest.

This event is free, but RSVPs are required. It will be held Wednesday evening, Dec. 3, in London. For more information or to RSVP, send an email to marketwatchevent@wsj.com.

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