The FTSE <.FTSE> ended the day 0.1 percent lower, weighed down by a pullback in mining stocks as metals slipped from three-year peaks hit on Monday.

The index was driven higher earlier, when the pound slipped after Bank of England policymakers speaking in parliament were interpreted by the market as broadly dovish and indicating internal debate over a November rate hike.

Data showing inflation rose to its highest level in more than five years in September made a rate hike more likely, market participants said. [nU8N13000D]

On the day, sharp moves in Merlin and Pearson took centre stage.

Shares in Merlin (>> Merlin Entertainments) plunged as much as 21 percent before ending the day down 15.9 percent, its biggest fall ever, after the Madame Tussauds and Legoland operator blamed a series of attacks in Britain and unfavourable weather for a dip in trading in its key summer period.

"Given all this additional uncertainty we see less and less reasons to own the shares," Liberum analysts said.

"While the market may be quiet, it is currently extremely intolerant of any company that dares to miss forecasts", Chris Beauchamp, an IG market analyst, wrote.

Convatec (>> ConvaTec Group) however, which had plummeted 26 percent after a profit warning on Monday, bounced back 3.9 percent, despite several broker downgrades on the medical devices maker.

Education group Pearson (>> Pearson) was the top performer, up 7.3 percent after it said it expected full-year operating profit to come in at the top half of its forecast range. [nL8N1MS0W7]

Mediclinic (>> Mediclinic International) retreated 4.1 percent after the South African private hospital group said it expects half-year earnings to drop due to weak performance in the United Arab Emirates.

A downgrade to "market perform" from Bernstein analysts sent recently merged asset manager Standard Life Aberdeen (>> Standard Life) down 3.9 percent.

"The stock feels like a consensus long post-deal and we see limited scope for remaining catalysts to drive the shares materially higher over the next twelve months," analysts said in a note.

Challenger bank Virgin Money (>> Virgin Money Holdings (UK) PLC) shone at the top of the mid-cap index after reporting steady gross mortgage lending in the third quarter thanks to robust customer demand due to low unemployment and a resilient housing market.

Investec analyst Ian Gordon said he expected the "stunning performance" to lead to new consensus upgrades on the stock.

Shares in online fashion retailer ASOS (>> ASOS plc) rose 1.8 percent after it raised its sales growth forecast, saying new products, competitive prices and better customer services continued to attract millennials to its website.

(Reporting by Julien Ponthus; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

By Julien Ponthus and Helen Reid