Britain's FTSE 100 <.FTSE> ended the session down 0.1 percent, with basic resource stocks adding the most points to the index.

Data showing improving manufacturing profits in China, indicating robust growth in the world's top metals consumer, boosted heavyweight miners as copper prices soared to a three-year high.

Antofagasta (>> Antofagasta), Glencore (>> Glencore), BHP Billiton (>> BHP Billiton Plc), Rio Tinto (>> Rio Tinto) and Anglo American (>> Anglo American) rose 0.5 percent to 1.9 percent.

Mid-caps Sirius Minerals (>> Sirius Minerals PLC), Kaz Minerals (>> KAZ Minerals PLC) and Vedanta Resources (>> Vedanta Resources) gained 3.1 to 6.4 percent.

Analysts' earnings expectations for the basic resources sector have grown rosier in recent weeks.

UK-listed miners rose in line with the European sector index <.SXPP>, which was up 0.8 percent at its highest since February 2013.

ConvaTec (>> ConvaTec Group) plummeted 26.6 percent after the firm warned full-year revenue growth would fall short of expectations, citing severe supply issues impacting two divisions that account for 60 percent of revenue.

The stock hit an all-time low and posted its worst day since its listing a year ago.

"For such a high-profile IPO to have its growth expectations slide so soon after listing is a poke in the eye for the London market," Patronus Partners analysts said in a note.

Earnings-per-share expectations could be downgraded 5 to 10 percent after this update, they predicted.

"ConvaTec is on a punchy rating," said Paul Kavanagh, director at Patronus.

"We hope this statement really bottoms out the extent of the problem, but the jury is still out until we see progress in the next three months," he added. "If there's not a bit of catch-up then 2018 forecasts could come under further pressure."

Another big faller was engineering group GKN (>> GKN), down 3.4 percent. Several brokerages cut their target price on the stock after GKN warned its annual profit would fall short of expectations due to disappointing aerospace trading.

(Reporting by Helen Reid and Kit Rees; Editing by Dale Hudson)

By Helen Reid and Kit Rees