* FTSE 100 gains 1.8 percent, hits highest since June 2008
* Banks, miners gain as Fed's QE boosts confidence
* Unilever gains, Wm Morrison falls on corporate news
By Simon Falush
LONDON, Nov 4 (Reuters) - Firmer banks and mining stocks lifted Britain's top share index to its highest in more than two years on Thursday as a move by the U.S. Federal Reserve to buy assets boosted investor confidence in equities.
By 0906 GMT the FTSE 100 was up 101.94 points or 1.8 percent at 5,850.91, reaching its highest since June 2008 after it closed 0.2 percent lower on Wednesday.
Financial stocks were among the strongest gainers. Man Group was the star performer, up 7.2 percent after the world's largest listed hedge fund firm said client assets rose to $40.5 billion at end-September after eight months of outflows.
Banks provided much of the index's strength, with HSBC and Lloyds Banking Group adding 4 and 1.9 percent respectively.
The Fed launched a fresh effort to support the U.S. economic recovery, committing to buy $600 billion in government bonds which lifted riskier assets around the world despite concerns the programme could do more harm than good.
The dollar index fell to an 11-month low, helping lift the price of metal and crude which supported mining and energy stocks.
"The quantitative easing by the Fed is going to give investors a short-term boost as people are seeing that central banks are going to do whatever it takes to support the economy," said Michael Hewson, markets analyst at CMC Markets.
Xstrata added 4 percent and Rio Tinto gained 3.2 percent while Royal Dutch Shell gained 1.2 percent.
UNILEVER GAINS
Though macroeconomic factors dominated, there was plenty of corporate news for investors to digest. Unilever jumped 5.5 percent after the consumer goods group matched forecasts with a 3.6 percent rise in third-quarter sales.
Wm Morrison Supermarkets was a feature among a small list of blue-chip fallers, down 1.7 percent after it posted a 1.3 percent rise in underlying sales and warned shoppers were likely to remain under pressure into the second half of 2011.
Rolls Royce fell 1.5 percent after Qantas Airways suspended flights of its Airbus A380 fleet after engine failure triggered an emergency landing in Singapore. Qantas A380s use Rolls-Royce Trent 900 engines.
Investors were waiting for Bank of England decisions on interest rates and quantitative easing (QE) due at 1200 GMT.
The BoE is likely to reject a new bout of QE, keeping policy on hold and eschewing the Fed's path of more economic stimulus.
Supporting the argument that further QE is not needed in the UK, British house prices rose by 1.8 percent last month, three times faster than expected.
Now that the index has broken through resistance around the 5,833 level, the 5,930 level -- which is a 75 percent retracement of the drop from December 2007 to 2009's low -- will be watched, said Nicole Elliott, technical analyst at Mizuho Corporate Bank.
She said after this a cluster of resistance levels around 6,000 will be watched.
On the other side of the Atlantic, U.S. weekly jobless claims data are due at 1230 GMT ahead of Friday's key U.S. non-farm payrolls data. (Editing by Michael Shields)