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UK Consumers Hit by Worries over War in Iran

LONDON, March 16 (Reuters) - British consumers have turned their least confident since the start of last year following ​the outbreak of war in the Middle East, financial ‌data firm S&P Global said on Monday in an early sign of the potential impact of the conflict on the economy.

S&P Global's Consumer Sentiment ​Index - based on a survey conducted March 5-9 - dropped ​to 44.1 in March from 44.8 in February, its ⁠lowest since January 2025.

"A marked deterioration of consumer sentiment in ​March means we are seeing the first concrete signs of ​the war in the Middle East damaging the UK economy," Maryam Baluch, an economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said.

Households were the most downbeat about ​their financial prospects since December 2023 and the wariest about ​making big purchases in 14 months, the firm said.

The Bank of England, ‌along ⁠with private economists, is watching for the impact of the U.S-Israeli war with Iran on the economy, including any hit to consumer spending as the rise in global energy prices threatens to ​push up inflation.

The ​BoE is ⁠likely to delay a previously expected interest rate cut on Thursday.

A separate survey published by polling firm ​YouGov on Monday showed 77% of respondents expected ​the ⁠conflict would have a negative impact on the UK and global economies in the longer term, and 64% expected a hit to ⁠their ​household finances.

Only one in four of those ​surveyed thought the attacks on Iran would succeed in stunting the country's apparent ​nuclear ambition, YouGov said.

Writing by William Schomberg; editing by Andy Bruce

Source: Reuters


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