* Eases back from 56-week closing high
* Banks mixed ahead of Citigroup and Goldman results
* J Sainsbury up on bid talk
By David Brett
LONDON, Oct 15 (Reuters) - Britain's top share index was 0.1
percent lower by mid-session Thursday, weighed on by weaker
commodity stocks as metal prices fell, ahead of results from
U.S. banks Citigroup
At 1044 GMT, the FTSE 100 <.FTSE> was down 5.56 points at 5,250.54, retreating from a 56-week closing high on Wednesday.
Miners were the top fallers as profit takers moved in as metal prices retreated.
Rio Tinto
"It's a little bit of a sell-off from the last few days. The FTSE's had a phenomenal run. All eyes will be on the numbers coming from the U.S. later," said Mark Priest, senior trader at ETX Capital.
Anglo American
Xstrata fell 1.9 percent, with Lonmin
Energy stocks were lower as investors banked profits
following the preious session's gains and as crude
BG Group
Tullow Oil
U.S. BANKS EYED
The index rose 2 percent on Wednesday after upbeat quarterly
earnings from U.S. investment bank JPMorgan Chase
Bank stocks were mixed ahead of results from Citigroup and Goldman Sachs, due at 1130 GMT and 1200 GMT respectively.
Heavyweight HSBC
The FTSE 100 has surged more than 51 percent from a six-year trough in March, but is still 3.3 percent below its level in mid-September 2008 before the collapse of Lehman Brothers.
British blue-chips underperformed the FTSE Eurofirst 300 <.FTEU3>, which added 0.5 percent on Thursday.
"The miners are fairly dominant in the FTSE as opposed to other indices, which is probably why the UK index is underperforming at the moment," said Priest at ETX Capital.
Food retailer J Sainsbury
The news helped saw peers Tesco
Life Insurers were also in demand after Nomura issued a bullish note on the sector.
Aviva
Among individual movers, Burberry