LONDON (Reuters) - The FTSE 100 outperformed European peers on Tuesday, helped by the energy and industrials sectors, while supermarket firms Sainsbury (>> J Sainsbury plc) and Morrison (>> WM Morrison Supermarkets PLC) fell on poor sales data.

The FTSE 100 <.FTSE> ended up 0.5 percent, outperforming the more hesitant Europe-wide STOXX 600 <.STOXX> index, which inched up 0.2 percent.

The British index was little changed after PMI data showed British construction growth slowed in March.

Precious metal miners Randgold Resources (>> Randgold Resources Limited) and Fresnillo (>> Fresnillo Plc) were among the top gainers, up 1.6 to 2.8 percent, as gold prices hit a one-month high.

Distributor and outsourcer Bunzl (>> Bunzl plc) rose 1.2 percent after it said it bought two safety workwear businesses: ML Kishigo in the United States and Neri in Italy.

"Two further bolt-on deals should enhance EPS by c.1% and evidence that conversion of the M&A pipeline is not slowing," said Jefferies analysts in a note.

Supermarkets Morrison (>> WM Morrison Supermarkets PLC) and Sainsbury (>> J Sainsbury plc) fell 2.8 percent and 2.2 percent respectively after Kantar Worldpanel data showed their sales struggled in the first quarter while discount competitors Aldi and Lidl performed strongly.

South Africa exposed stocks Investec (>> Investec plc) and Old Mutual (>> Old Mutual plc) rose 0.6 percent and 0.1 percent respectively, recovering from earlier losses due to credit ratings agency S&P's downgrade of the African country to sub-investment grade.

"It's not a huge surprise South Africa has lost its investment-grade credit rating, so markets will likely have an initial reprice in terms of corporate exposure, but it would require further economic changes to drive a more prolonged sell-off," said Ed Park, investment director at Brooks Macdonald.

GKN (>> GKN plc), which makes engines and components for cars, was down 2 percent, tracking Europe-wide losses in the auto sector <.SXAP>, fell 1 percent.

Among mid-caps, meanwhile, valve maker Rotork (>> Rotork p.l.c.) was up 4.4 percent and set for its best day in four months.

JP Morgan upgraded the firm, which is exposed to a recovery in oil and gas markets, to 'overweight', saying its earnings power had increased.

"The group remains well positioned to benefit from the recovery, and growth opportunities exist outside of just oil & gas capex," the bank said.

Sophos (>> Sophos Ltd) hit an all-time high, up 11.4 percent after the IT security firm reported billings ahead of consensus.

Nanoco Group (>> Nanoco Group PLC) fell 12.5 percent in heavy volumes after the maker of quantum dots - semiconductor nanocrystals used in displays - said sales did not materialise in the second half, and cut its full year expectations.

(Reporting by Helen Reid; Additional reporting by Danilo Masoni; Editing by Andrew Bolton)

By Helen Reid