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GBP Slides as Middle East Conflict Lifts Oil Prices, Muddies Rate Outlook

LONDON, March 3 (Reuters) - The British pound tumbled to its lowest in three months on Tuesday as the intensifying conflict in the Middle East drove oil prices higher, rekindling ​inflation fears and prompting traders to trim rate-cut bets.

The currency slipped 0.65% ‌against the dollar to $1.3319, and was largely unchanged versus the euro at 87.14 pence.

The latest bout of risk aversion piled onto existing pressure on the currency, which has already been weighed down by ​concerns over the UK's economic outlook and domestic political uncertainty.

At her budget update ​speech, finance minister Rachel Reeves said Britain's economy is forecast to grow ⁠by 1.1% this year, citing the latest projections from the Office for Budget Responsibility.

The ​new prediction was weaker than a forecast of 1.4% growth for 2026 in the ​OBR's previous outlook published in November.

"This government has the right economic plan for our country, a plan that is even more important in a world that in the last few days has become yet ​more uncertain," she said.

RATE CUTS IN QUESTION

"We think that in all scenarios the Bank ​of England will be more sensitive to the upside risks to inflation than some other central ‌banks," said ⁠Capital Economics' chief UK economist Paul Dales.

Traders are pricing in just a 22% chance of a rate cut at the central bank's meeting later this month, compared with 75% on Friday, according to LSEG data. British government bond yields leapt for a second consecutive ​day.

The complexity in the ​global backdrop comes ⁠at a sensitive time for UK assets. Data released last month showed Britain's economy barely grew in the final quarter of 2025.

Labour's ​defeat in the Manchester special election has also increased pressure on ​Prime Minister ⁠Keir Starmer, potentially compounding investor unease.

"Much depends on how the conflict evolves and how long it lasts, and what that all means for energy prices," Dales said.

U.S. President Donald Trump ⁠said ​his country's military has enough stockpiled weapons to fight wars "forever."

Brent ​crude futures were up 6.8%, at $83.05 a barrel after touching their highest since July 2024 at $85.12. U.S. West ​Texas Intermediate crude gained 6.7% at $76.04.

Reporting by Niket Nishant in London; Editing by Sharon Singleton

Source: Reuters


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