The pound slipped on Monday, weighed down by disappointing manufacturing data and fears over a Brexit spat between Britain and Spain over Gibraltar.

Sterling dropped 0.5% against the US dollar, taking it below the 1.25 mark to 1.247. Versus the euro, the UK currency fell nearly 0.6% to 1.170.

London's blue chip index was also in the red, closing lower by 0.5% or 40.23 points to 7,282.69.

Investors were pulling away from the pound after senior Tory Lord Howard said he was certain that Prime Minister Theresa May would be ready to resort to war to defend Gibraltar as Margaret Thatcher did with the Falklands - prompting calls from Madrid for the UK to calm down.

He made the comments after an EU document suggested that Spain would be given a veto on post-Brexit agreements governing the British overseas territory.

Jasper Lawler, a senior market analyst for London Capital Group, said the row was reviving Brexit jitters.

"Gibraltar is the perfect example of the deep ties between the UK and the EU. Presumably a diplomatic solution can be reached without war between the UK and Spain but demonstrates the kind of curve balls the negotiations will throw up."

The UK currency was also weighed down by data from the Markit/CIPS UK Manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI), which showed that manufacturing output slipped to its weakest pace of growth in eight months in March following a slowdown in consumer goods production.

Across Europe, the French Cac 40 and German Dax fell 0.7% and 0.4%, respectively.

In oil markets, Brent crude fell more than 1% to 53.10 US dollars per barrel (£42.59) after oil started to flow in Libya after local militia disrupted production for nearly a week.

In UK stocks, Lloyds Banking Group fell 0.29p to 66.03p after the Government cut its holding in the bank to 1.97%.

BP shares fell 1.45p to 456.1p following news that the oil giant sold its Forties Pipeline System and Kinneil Terminal - which deliver almost 40% of the UK North Sea oil and gas - to Ineos for 250 million US dollars (£199 million).

Reckitt Benckiser dropped 30p to 7,256p after confirming it had begun a strategic review of its food business, which includes French's mustard and Frank's Red Hot Sauce, following speculation that it had put the unit up for sale.

Burberry shares rose 13p to 1,737p after the company said it was joining forces with make-up and fragrance firm Coty through a licensing agreement that would start in in October.

News that G4S struck a 56.5 million US dollar (£45.2 million) deal to offload its youth detention centres across America sent shares up 1.3p to 305.6p.

Shares in British chip designer and Apple supplier Imagination Technologies plunged 165.25p to 103p after revealing the US giant has said it will no longer use its products.

Imagination said in a statement: "Imagination Technologies ... has been notified by Apple, its largest customer, that Apple is of a view that it will no longer use the group's intellectual property in its new products in 15 months' to two years' time, and as such will not be eligible for royalty payments under the current licence and royalty agreement."

WS Atkins shares surged 410p to 1,950p after the British engineering and design consultancy received a tentative takeover offer from Canadian engineering giant SNC-Lavalin which values the firm at £2 billion.

The biggest risers on the FTSE 100 were Provident Financial up 47p to 3,044p, Mondi up 28p to 1,955p, Micro Focus International up 27p to 2,305p, and Randgold Resources up 70p to 7,035p.

The biggest fallers on the FTSE 100 were Next down 154p to 4,166p, ITV down 5.6p to 213.3p, Prudential down 33p to 1,653p, and Standard Chartered down 14.7p to 748.3p.