Economic news

FTSE Indexes Set for Worst Week in nearly Year, Middle East Tensions Weigh

  • FTSE 100 down 0.1%, FSTE 250 ​flat
  • British house prices rise 1.3% in February
  • IMI forecasts mid-single-digit organic revenue ‌growth for 2026

March 6 (Reuters) - The UK's main indexes were on track for their biggest weekly decline in almost a year on Friday, as the escalating war in the Middle East ​fuelled concerns about a resurgence in inflation driven by higher energy prices.

The ​blue-chip FTSE 100 dipped 0.1% by 1130 GMT, while the FTSE ⁠250 was flat, but both the indexes were on course for their ​worst weekly showing since the April 2025 rout triggered by U.S. President Donald ​Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs.

Shares of oil majors Shell and BP rose nearly 2%, tracking crude prices , as the conflict kept shipping and energy exports through the vital Strait of Hormuz blocked.

Qatar's ​energy minister expects all Gulf energy producers to shut down exports within weeks. ​In an interview with the Financial Times, he said the move could drive oil to $150 a ‌barrel.

Soaring ⁠energy prices have prompted traders to sharply pull back bets of interest rate cuts this year, with money market futures pricing in just 15% odds of a 25-basis-point rate cut from the Bank of England this month, compared with ​80% before the conflict ​began.

Halifax data showed British ⁠house prices rose in February at the fastest annual pace since October, up 1.3% year‑on‑year and beating economists' forecasts. ​But the lender warned that geopolitical uncertainty and renewed inflation ​pressures could ⁠slow the pace of any interest‑rate cuts, tempering the outlook for the sector.

Among other movers, Flutter Entertainment inched up 1.1% after activist investor Parvus Asset Management doubled its ⁠stake ​in the FanDuel-owner.

IMI rose 2% after the specialist engineering ​firm forecast mid-single-digit organic revenue growth for 2026, citing resilient demand in its automation segment, and announced a ​500-million-pound share buyback programme.

Reporting by Tharuniyaa Lakshmi in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel

Source: Reuters


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