By William L. Watts, MarketWatch

FRANKFURT (MarketWatch) -- Shares in London traded little changed Monday, pausing after an advance last week that took the FTSE 100 equities benchmark to levels last seen in 2008.

The FTSE 100 index was flat at 6,126.82.

Its close on Friday above the 6,100 level leaves "a clear path for a significant move higher for the index. However, with the old adage, 'when everyone's a buyer it's time to sell,' one should treat the current trading environment with caution," said Mike McCudden, head of derivatives at stockbroker Interactive Investor in London.

A heavy round of U.S. corporate results beginning later this week will likely have a hand in setting the London trading tone, with major banks set to dominate the earnings headlines. .

Financials led some gains, with Lloyds Banking Group PLC up 1.9% and Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC rose 1.4%.

Broker moves commanded much of the action, with fund management company Schroders PLC up over 3% to 1,875 pence after analyst at J.P. Morgan Cazenove raised their price target to 2,556 pence from 1,882.

Shares of G4S rose over 1% to 271 pence after Credit Suisse lifted it to outperform from neutral and its target price to 330 pence from 275 pence.

Miners were also in focus. Shares of Eurasian Natural Resources Corp. led London's gainers with a rise of 3.6% to 334 pence after analysts at Credit Suisse lifted it to outperform from neutral, raising the target price to 400 pence from 350 pence, citing potential re-rating catalysts for 2013.

Barclays downgraded the European mining sector to neutral from positive on Monday, saying the outperformance of that sector over the past six months has been linked to an 83% rise in iron-ore prices, and now's a good time to reduce weightings. The analysts cut their 2013 earnings-per-share forecasts for the sector by 7%. Iron-ore-exposed stocks will fare better, while copper, coal and precious metals come off worse, they said.

The analysts cut Kazakhmys PLC to underweight from equalweight, and said BHP Billiton now moves to the top of its rankings over Rio Tinto.

Rio Tinto PLC rose 1.2% and BHP Billiton PLC gained 0.5%.

Drug maker GlaxoSmithKline PLC led decliners, its shares falling nearly 1%, while telecom heavyweight Vodafone Group PLC lost 0.3%. Glaxo announced a regulatory submission to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for a diabetes treatment.

Vodafone said it intends to start discussions Tuesday with unions representing workers in Spain, concerning planned layoffs in the crisis-hit country. Vodafone has about 4,300 staffers in Spain. .

Shares of Associated British Foods PLC fell nearly 2% after analysts at Nomura cut it to neutral from buy on valuation.

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