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UK Stocks Dip as Iran Conflict Sparks Global Selloff

  • FTSE 100 down 1.2%, FTSE 250 down 1.4%
  • Oil and defence stocks climb
  • Airlines, hotels and banks slide

March 2 (Reuters) - UK stock indexes were swept up ​in a global selloff on Monday, as an escalating military conflict in ‌the Middle East fuelled a jump in oil prices and drove investors towards safe-haven assets.

Oil prices , surged almost 7% after retaliatory Iranian attacks disrupted shipping in the crucial Strait of ​Hormuz following the weekend's bombing by Israel and the United States that ​killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

While British oil majors such ⁠as Shell rose 1.9% and defence companies like BAE Systems climbed 6%, other ​equity sectors, particularly banks and travel companies, came under heavy selling pressure as ​investors braced for travel and economic disruptions.

The blue-chip FTSE 100 closed down 1.2%, having touched a record high in the prior session, while the domestically oriented FTSE 250 index fell 1.4%.

"If ​the issues persist, then the market will start to worry about new ​inflationary pressures and that could lower expectations for near-term interest rate cuts," said Dan Coatsworth, head ‌of ⁠markets at AJ Bell.

Banks including HSBC, Barclays and Lloyds Banking Group fell between 2.5% and 4.2%, as surging oil prices fuelled concerns about a resurgence of inflation and a potential dent to the economy.

British government bond yields rose as investors trimmed ​their expectations for ​Bank of England ⁠interest rate cuts. Traders were pricing in a 52% chance that the BoE will cut rates later this month, down ​from about 78% last week.

BoE policymaker Alan Taylor said that it ​was too ⁠soon to tell how the conflict in the Middle East would impact Britain's sluggish economy.

British Airways operator IAG fell 5.5% after the airline said on Saturday it had ⁠cancelled flights ​to Tel Aviv and Bahrain until March 3. ​The broader FTSE 350 travel & leisure index fell 4.3%, with hotels and cruise operators among the ​major decliners.

Reporting by Sruthi Shankar in Bengaluru; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair and Ros Russell

Source: Reuters


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