Pound Drops 2-1/2-Month Low Amid Middle East Tensions
2026-03-06 09:34
By
Joana Ferreira
1 min. read
The British pound fell toward $1.33, its weakest level since December 9, as investors weighed the potential economic impact of the escalating Middle East conflict alongside rising inflation pressures and the possibility of a more hawkish Bank of England stance.
Regional tensions escalated as Israel struck Beirut on Friday, after ordering the unprecedented evacuation of the city’s southern suburbs, marking a significant expansion of its war against Iran, launched a week ago in coordination with the US.
Meanwhile, President Trump claimed a role in choosing Iran’s next supreme leader following Ayatollah Khamenei’s reported death.
The resulting surge in energy prices is expected to keep inflation elevated across Europe, limiting the likelihood of a Bank of England rate cut.
UK money markets now assign less than a 20% chance of a rate cut this month, down sharply from over 80% before the conflict, while UK rate futures price less than a 50–50 chance of a single cut by the end of 2026.